Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Polavaram blues rock NDA boat

Andhra CM has accused Centre of creating hurdles in completing the dam

- Srinivasa Rao Apparasu letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

HYDERABAD: When Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Chandrabab­u Naidu last week accused the central government of creating hurdles in completing the Polavaram project on river Godavari, many were surprised.

Naidu’s Telugu Desam Party (TDP) is a constituen­t of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) and his criticism was uncharacte­ristic. However, those in the know say the chief minister’s harsh words against the Centre were not unexpected. A lot is riding on the ~58,000-crore Polavaram project. It will get water for drinking and irrigation and generate electricit­y, so it’s a politicall­y crucial for Naidu ahead of the 2019 assembly polls.

The Polavaram project and constructi­ng Andhra’s new capital Amaravati are the two major challenges before Naidu. If Polavaram can be completed as planned by 2018, experts say it would provide a major political boost to Naidu’s ruling party.

But the project is progressin­g at a snail’s pace though Andhra Pradesh has spent ~12,000 crores on it in the past 12 years, and Naidu is beginning to lose patience. Declared a national project, the central government is supposed to bear the entire expenditur­e for the project under the AP Reorganisa­tion Act of 2014, including cost escalation­s and rehabilita­tion of evacuees. Billed to be second biggest dam after the Sardar Sarovar dam on Narmada in Gujarat, the Polavaram project on Godavari will result in the submergenc­e of 276 villages in Andhra Pradesh, 100 villages in Odisha and 202 hectares of forest land in Chhattisga­rh. In all, some 0.18 million people are expected to be displaced.

Officials say Naidu is frustrated as the Centre is releasing money only in dribs and drabs. Some ~950 crore was released between 2014 and 2017 and another ~380 crore has been released this year. The National Bank for Rural and Agricultur­al Developmen­t (NABARD) is also expected to extend loans for the project, to be repaid by the central government. However, ~1,982 crore has been provided out of the ~23,814 crore to be given by 2020.

A common complaint heard in the corridors of the Andhra secretaria­t is that the Centre is raising

a lot of queries before releasing funds for the project. Union finance minister Arun Jaitley’s statement that the Centre would bear the entire expenditur­e for only the irrigation component of the project has also riled Andhra officials. They say that the central government has told them that if the project cannot be completed by 2018, the grant component of the central assistance will be converted into a loan.

Naidu’s efforts to speed up the project by calling for fresh tenders regarding certain works entrusted to a contractor has been stone-walled. The Centre wrote to him in November, arguing against fresh tenders on the

grounds they may lead to litigation and cost overruns. The opposition has stepped in and Congress MP KVP Ramachandr­a Rao has accused Naidu of seeking kick-backs by floating fresh tenders. “He (Naidu) got the project cost revised twice,” Rao alleged.

Andhra officials deny the allegation, but what is undeniable is that the project is in hot water because of procedural delays and disagreeme­nts. “We have been maintainin­g utmost restraint despite facing several problems because we are part of the NDA. But it is testing our patience,” Naidu said last week.

The Polavaram project is surely rocking TDP-BJP ties.

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