TS rejects Centre’s graft charges in Kaleshwaram
The Fifteenth Finance Commission’s remarks on the K. Chandrashekar Rao-led TRS government’s flagship project, Kaleshwaram, in its report tabled in Parliament on February 1 has not gone down well with the state government.
The state government has found the commission’s stand on Kaleshwaram to be “very strange”. This is because members of the commission, who visited the Kaleshwaram project site on more than one occasion in the past, had heaped praises on the project, mostly between 2018 and 2020.
However, in its report, the Finance Commission “questioned the financial viability” of this project, being taken up at a cost of more than `80,000 crore.
The FC report pointed out that this project “invariably notches up a massive electricity bill”, bringing to question the financial viability of the project, in the “absence of a guaranteed revenue stream”.
It goes on to suggest to the state government that it “should try to generate adequate revenue” (like through user charges) to at least cover operations and maintenance cost of the project.
The report went on to argue that the state’s “huge investments made in irrigation, have not yet resulted in commensurate returns” in terms of crop yield improvements.
These remarks are incongruent to past observations of the commission’s members and more aligned to the criticism of opposition parties, including senior BJP leaders, who are accusing the TRS government of “wasting huge public money” on Kaleshwaram to “get kickbacks from contractors”, instead of taking up this project for overall benefit of the state, or to empower and enrich the farmers.
THE 15TH FINANCE Commission report pointed out that this project “invariably notches up a massive electricity bill”, bringing to question the financial viability of the project, in the “absence of a guaranteed revenue stream”.