Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Nod for metro plans worth ₹1.07 lakh cr

Finance ministry gives inprincipl­e approval to projects in Indore, Bhopal, Kanpur, Agra and Delhi

- Moushumi Das Gupta

NEW DELHI: Metro constructi­on will pick up pace in the country with the Union finance ministry recently giving “in-principle” approval to five proposed metro projects in Indore, Bhopal, Kanpur, Agra, and Delhi, with an estimated cost of ₹1.07 lakh crore, senior central and state government officials familiar with the matter said.

Besides the five metro projects, the ₹32,000 crore Delhimeeru­t corridor of the proposed Rapid Rail Transit System also got the in-principle nod from the finance ministry.

The “in-principle” approval is just the first step in a series of approvals that will follow before the projects finally take off the ground. “These projects will now go to the finance ministry’s Public Investment Board (PIB) for approval. After PIB clearance, the projects will go to the Union cabinet,” one of the officials cited above said.

In Delhi, three corridors of phase four of the metro, running into 61.66km with an estimated cost of ₹29,000 crore, have been approved, another official of the Union housing and urban affairs ministry said.

Giving details of the projects in Uttar Pradesh, a senior official of the state urban developmen­t department said, “The total length of the two corridors of the Kanpur metro rail project is 32.38km and the completion cost, excluding the land cost and state taxes, is ₹16,192 crore. The length of the Agra stretch of the metro, which will also have two corridors, is 30km and the completion cost is ₹12,253 crore.”

Two of the other metro projects that got the “in-principle” nod are in poll-bound Madhya Pradesh. The proposed length of the Indore project is 104.25km and the estimated cost is ₹26,762 crore while the length of the Bhopal metro is 95.03km and the estimated cost is ₹22,504.25.

The projects approved by the finance ministry are the first to be approved after the government came out with the new metro policy last August. The policy made PPP (public private partnershi­p) component mandatory for availing central assistance for all new metro projects.

G Raghuram, transport economist at IIM Bangalore, said that with the aspiration for vehicle ownership growing, mass rapid transport systems are a desirable option in our cities that have reasonable population density.

“However, it is important to identify good corridors to ensure that the project is financiall­y viable. Considerin­g the complexiti­es involved in metro constructi­on, bringing in private players at the constructi­on stage is risky. The government should do the constructi­on and private players can be roped in for operation and maintenanc­e,” he said.

Raghuram cited the case of Hyderabad and Mumbai metro built on PPP mode.

“They got delayed because during the constructi­on phase there were many issues of getting permission and public agitation, risks that would be too much for private partners,” he said.

Besides the five metro projects, the ₹32,000 crore Delhimeeru­t corridor of the proposed Rapid Rail Transit System has also been given the in-principle nod by the finance ministry.

 ?? AFP FILE ?? Work in progress on the under constructi­on Ahmedabad Metro Rail project in Ahmedabad.
AFP FILE Work in progress on the under constructi­on Ahmedabad Metro Rail project in Ahmedabad.

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