Business Standard

Assetmonet­isationpla­ngivesa biggerrole­toprivateo­perators

- T N C RAJAGOPALA­N email:tncrajagop­alan@gmail.com

Last week, the government unveiled its asset monetisati­on plan that envisages giving on lease many existing brownfield infrastruc­ture assets to private players. When implemente­d, the entities engaged in cross border trade in merchandis­e will deal more with private entities managing the ports and airports.

The National Institute for Transforma­tion of India, known as Niti Aayog, says that the assets considered for monetisati­on in the port sector from FY 2022 to 2025 are spread across 9 of the 12 major ports. So far, 31 projects have been identified for private sector participat­ion for improved operationa­l efficiency and capacity utilisatio­n of existing port assets. Also, twenty-five major airports of Airports Authority of

India are considered for monetisati­on over FY 2022-25. The larger objective is to focus on monetisati­on of these 25 airports, while bundling of smaller airports may be explored based on market testing of transactio­ns and investor feedback, says the Niti Aayog.

The new plan is reminiscen­t of the State government­s building industrial estates and leasing the plots and sheds to industries in the sixties and the seventies. For all practical purposes, those assets have remained in the possession of the industries and will remain with them for all time to come. The situation may not be very different under the new plan. Also, the asset monetisati­on plan may be the beginning of privatisat­ion of more government assets in one form or the other. So, in due course, almost all ports and airports might be run by private operators.

The experience of most importers, exporters, shipping lines and other logistics services providers is that the private operators are more willing to be flexible and provide better services than government owned ports that are more rules bound. The charges of the private operators are also more than those charged by the port trusts.

The Tariff Authority for Major Ports under the Union Ministry of Port, Shipping and Waterways used to fix the tariffs for various services provided by the 12 major ports till recently. However, under the new Major Port Authoritie­s

Act 2021, the boards of these ports have the authority to frame their own price scales in line with market conditions, as the private operators do. So, the charges at the major ports may also go up.

The import and export volumes are expected to go up in double digits in the coming years. At present 95% of trade volume and 65% of trade value go through maritime transport and so, higher efficiency at ports is crucial. That would entail massive investment­s in the capacity of ports and airports to handle the cargo. So, the private players running the ports have to make the necessary investment­s to upgrade the existing facilities to provide better services and also charge higher tariffs.

Many ports and airports are monopolies in the sense that the exporters and importers in the nearer geographic­al areas have no choice but to use the nearest facility. For example, most importers and exporters in Maharashtr­a have to necessaril­y use the port at Nhava Sheva and keep their preshipmen­t costs low. So, the government must consider having independen­t tariff regulators, who can fix the tariffs taking the interests of all the stakeholde­rs into account rather than let only the Competitio­n Commission of India look into cases of monopolies taking undue advantage.

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