Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Toll revenues recover gradually as travel restrictio­ns are eased

- Tanya Thomas tanya.t@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Toll collection­s on India’s highways have picked up in June after a nearly threemonth slump as the government eased restrictio­ns on movement of goods across states.

Industry experts estimate that highway traffic and toll revenues have recovered to 70-75% of pre-Covid-19 levels as India emerges from one of the world’s most stringent lockdowns.

“We’re seeing a nearly 75% return of normal traffic numbers on our assets,” a leading infrastruc­ture developer said on condition of anonymity. “Toll revenues depend on the kind of traffic combinatio­ns, passenger or commercial traffic. The roads where we see more commercial traffic, revenues have picked up faster. Passenger numbers are still a fraction of what they used to be before the lockdown.”

Sealing of inter-state borders and even districts in some states to stem the spread of the virus had severely curtailed goods movement during the lockdown, leading to dwindling toll collection­s for road developers. The lifting of nearly all restrictio­ns on goods movement within the country has boosted toll collection­s, although an improvemen­t in India’s external trade will be key for a full recovery.

“There is an uptick on freight movement on highways,” said Jagannaray­an Padmanabha­n, director and practice leadertran­sport and logistics, Crisil Infrastruc­ture Advisory. “Domestic freight movement accounted for the bulk of highway traffic, so that part is recovering well. Passenger traffic has fully washed out; even with restrictio­ns on passenger movement being relaxed, we’re not seeing this pick-up yet.”

While consolidat­ed traffic or toll revenue numbers aren’t available for the year to March, government and private road operators generated about ₹24,400 crore in toll revenues in the previous fiscal. Analysts estimate it had risen to nearly ₹25,300 crore in FY20.

A report by credit ratings agency Crisil in early May estimated that the private sector would lose toll revenue of ₹3,450-3,700 crore between March and June, assuming a 90% revenue loss in April, 60-75% in May and 30-40% for June.

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Domestic freight movement accounted for the bulk of highway traffic.
MINT ■ Domestic freight movement accounted for the bulk of highway traffic.

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