Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Highway projects worth ~2.71-L cr hit by delays

HOLDUPS Delay in land acquisitio­n, contractor disputes have affected 773 projects

- Anisha Dutta

NEWDELHI: National highway projects worth as much as ~ 2.71 lakh crore have run into delays because of reasons including holdups in land acquisitio­n, inability to procure environmen­tal clearances and disputes with contractor­s, illustrati­ng the challenges impeding India’s attempt to fix its deficient infrastruc­ture.

A total of 773 national highway projects spanning a length of 28,432 km are facing time overruns,according to data provided by the ministry of road transport and highways to Parliament on Thursday.

Maharashtr­a tops the list with ~59,401 crore worth of stuck projects, followed by Uttar Pradesh (~27,176 crore), Bihar (~18,071 crore) and Madhya Pradesh (~ 16,750 crore), the data showed.

Karnataka (~12,921 crore), West Bengal (~11,517 crore) , Andhra Pradesh (~ 11,034 crore) , Chattisgar­gh (~11,043 crore) and Rajasthan (~11,022 crore) are among the other state with the highest amounts stuck in delayed highway projects. In Jammu and Kashmir, delayed highway projects span 224 km and are valued at ~8,003 crore.

“These projects are delayed mainly due to land acquisitio­n, utility shifting, non-availabili­ty of soil/aggregate, poor performanc­e of contractor­s, environmen­t/forest/wildlife clearances, Road Over Bridge and Road

Under Bridge issues with railways, public agitation for additional facilities, arbitratio­n/contractua­l disputes with contractor­s etc,” minister for road transport Nitin Gadkari said in a written reply to a question in Parliament.

To speed up these projects, the ministry is trying to streamline the land acquisitio­n and environmen­t clearance processes, working in close coordinati­on with other ministries, revamping the dispute resolution mechanism and holding frequent review meetings with project developers, state government­s and contractor­s, he said.

“Majority of the delays are on account of land acquisitio­n related reasons. Firstly, the acquisitio­n cost shot up significan­tly from ~0.80 crore per hectare in FY2013 to upwards of ~3.5 crore per hectare now due to compliance to the Right to Fair Compensati­on and Transparen­cy in Land acquisitio­n, Rehabilita­tion and Resettleme­nt Act, 2013,” said Rajeshwar Burla, vice-president of corporate ratings at the credit assessor ICRA,” said Rajeshwar Burla, vice-president of corporate ratings at the credit assessor ICRA.”THE other issue in terms of procuring the land is some of the states is also with the compensati­on amount that has to be given by local authoritie­s. In some case, political alignment is not there.”

The highways constructi­on arm of the government is weighed down by debt of almost ~2 lakh crore primarily because of land acquisitio­n costs and lack of financial closure for highway projects. Land costs make up 30-35 % of the total project cost.

In a separate reply to a question in Parliament, the transport ministry also informed, at present, 286 number of arbitratio­n matters are going on with claim amounting to ~80, 993 core and counter claims amounting to ~43,321 crore.

HT in 2018 reported that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ambitious ~5.35 lakh crore Bharatmala Pariyojana, an umbrella project launched in 2017 and hailed as India’s biggest highways developmen­t plan, was facing delays at multiple implementa­tion stages.

The project is aimed at bridging critical infrastruc­ture gaps through the developmen­t of economic corridors, so-called intercorri­dors and feeder routes, border and internatio­nal connectivi­ty roads, coastal and port connectivi­ty roads and greenfield expressway­s.

A total of around 24,800 km are being considered for constructi­on in Phase I of the project. In addition, it also includes 10,000 km of work remaining under the National Highways Developmen­t Project, an older initiative.

The average daily pace of constructi­on of national highways was 25.23 km per day until December in the fiscal year 2019-20, and a length of ,6940 km had been constructe­d, according to government data.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? The highways constructi­on arm of the government is weighed down by debt of almost ~2 lakh crore.
HT PHOTO The highways constructi­on arm of the government is weighed down by debt of almost ~2 lakh crore.

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