Millennium Post

Insufficie­nt; doesn’t cover debt repayment obligation’

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NEW DELHI: Road regulator NHAI’S decision to give relief on interest cost and operationa­l expenses is a welcome step but the compensati­on is insufficie­nt as it does not cover debt repayment obligation, ratings agency ICRA said.

Post demonetisa­tion of currency notes of Rs 500 and Rs 1000, government suspended user fee collection on National Highways with effect from November 9 which went on till December 2 (midnight).

“NHAI’S plan to provide immediate relief by covering 90 per cent of interest cost and O&M expenses (lower of actual and projected at the time of bidding) for the period during which tolling is suspended is a welcome move, however, the compensati­on does not cover the debt repayment obligation,” ICRA said.

The proposed compensati­on mechanism based on Operations and Maintenanc­e (O&M) and interest costs, could lead to disputes with developers given the huge revenue loss for them, it added.

“Given that the revenue loss is greater than Rs 1 crore in most of the BOT (Toll) projects and even in terms of the net realisable fee, it is around 6.6 per cent (24/365*100), some of the developers want Clause 41 to be invoked in this case,” ICRA Vice President Shubham Jain said.

Under this, NHAI is obligated to place the concession­aire in the same financial position as it would have enjoyed had there been no such change in law. In which case, the clause also provides for cash compensati­on for revenue loss in order to protect the net present value of the cash flows to the developers, he added.

Classifyin­g the temporary suspension of toll collection as a political event under force majeure, the NHAI plans to provide compensati­on to basis (in sync with semi-annuity payments from authority), majority of the toll road projects have monthly debt-repayment frequencie­s, he said.

“With only interest cost and O&M expenses getting compensate­d, the compensati­on will be inadequate from the debt servicing point of view, unless the project has debt service reserve account or other cash reserves to fall back on,” Jain added.

National Highway Authority of India (NHA) has suffered an income loss of around Rs 1,238 crore due to suspension of toll collection on highways till December 2 post demonetisa­tion.

Average toll collection per day is Rs 51.59 crore from fee plazas under NHAI, and taking into account the exemption till December 2, the income loss to NHAI due to suspension of toll collection on highways is around Rs 1,238 crore.

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