Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Cutting corners on infrastruc­ture projects

There must be greater transparen­cy in awarding constructi­on contracts

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The part of the Varanasi flyover which came crashing down killing 17 people had been constructe­d only in February. This suggests shoddy execution and possibly poor quality material, something that plagues many constructi­on projects in India. Projects are undertaken in haste, often before elections, are executed with little planning and with scant regard to engineerin­g norms. Most infrastruc­ture projects suffer from huge delays that push costs up and encourage contractor­s to cut corners. This causes lethal structural failures as seen in the Varanasi case and other projects. In 2016, a flyover collapsed in Kolkata, killing 27 people. Corruption is usually at the root of it which is why the National Democratic Alliance government had promised to improve India’s crumbling infrastruc­ture through foreign direct investment. Since the primary culprit here is the constructi­on industry, it would be useful and necessary to have greater transparen­cy in bidding and awarding of contracts. Once an accident such as the Varanasi flyover collapse takes place, it is vital that accountabi­lity be fixed starting from the source of the contract.

India has a huge infrastruc­ture deficit. While the constructi­on of high rises, bridges, underpasse­s and metro lines is in overdrive, attention must also be paid to their durability and life cycle. The very fact that every monsoon, many urban roads and buildings cave in suggests that contractor­s do not build infrastruc­ture to last.

The politician-bureaucrat-builder nexus is no secret. But the regularity with which poor infrastruc­ture costs people their lives suggests that nothing has been done to break this. Contracts should have a clear timeline and strict fines should be imposed if the contractor for delays. Politician­s, city planners and contractor­s must take ownership of infrastruc­ture projects. It is the only way to prevent similar disasters.

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