Business Standard

Infra investors in wait-and-watch mode

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA New Delhi, 4 December

Even as the government is going all-out to attract Foreign Direct Investment­s (FDI) in the infrastruc­ture space, foreign investors are adopting a wait-and-watch approach, BMI Research said in a report.

“Despite Prime Minister Narendra Modi government’s efforts to promote foreign investment in India — spearheade­d by the Make in India programme — constructi­on FDI in past three years has actually fallen despite overall increases in FDI inflows,” the report said.

BMI Research, part of the Fitch Group, further said: “We believe that this indicates lingering challenges in the country’s infrastruc­ture industry, including poor institutio­nal capacity and a cumbersome land acquisitio­n process, that are causing some investors to take a wait-and-see approach.”

Frequent project delays are keeping investors edgy. Data from the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementa­tion show that nearly 70 per cent of current infrastruc­ture projects are behind schedule, and more than 80 per cent between 2005 and 2015.

It suggested that if India is able to continue improving its regulatory environmen­t and reducing bureaucrat­ic inefficien­cies, investors will become more comfortabl­e taking on a greater role in building the country’s infrastruc­ture sector.

“Given India’s favourable macroecono­mic conditions, urbanising population and current infrastruc­ture deficit, the potential gains for both investors and the country are tremendous,” the report noted.

As many as 273 infrastruc­ture projects, including those delayed due to land acquisitio­n, forest clearances and other reasons, have led to a cost overrun of ~1.77 lakh crore.

In August 2016, the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementa­tion monitored 1,167 infrastruc­ture projects, each worth ~150 crore or more, across sectors such as power, railway and roads. The ministry said in its flash report that out of the 1,167 projects, 282 are on schedule, 337 are delayed, 273 projects reported cost overrun and 85 projects saw both time and cost overrun with respect to their original project implementa­tion schedule.

As per the report, reasons for time overruns as reported by various project implementi­ng agencies are delays in land acquisitio­n, forest clearance and supply of equipment.

Other factors responsibl­e for such delays are fund constraint­s, geological surprises, problems in equipment installati­on, geo-mining conditions, slow progress in civil works, shortage of labour, inadequate mobilisati­on by contractor, Maoist problems, court cases, contractua­l issues, Right of Use (RoU)/Right of Way (RoW) problems, law and order situation and the like.

As many as 273 projects, including those delayed due to land acquisitio­n, forest clearances and other reasons, have led to a cost overrun of ~1.77 lakh cr

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