Business Standard

‘India needs a lot of capacity addition in years to come’

- Formore, visit business-standard.com

At a time when India is planning huge investment­s in signalling, electrific­ation and metro rail, ALAIN SPOHR, managing director, Alstom India & South Asia, talks to

Shine Jacob about the company's road map. While betting big on the merger with Siemens, Spohr also sees huge growth in the Indian market with the upcoming infrastruc­tural projects. Edited excerpts:

Last year, A ls tom and Siemens had agreed to merge the rail business globally. What is the status of that?

We are in the process of getting non-compete clearances from various organisati­ons. In the meantime, it is business as usual for us, particular­ly in the Indian market, we are strongly competing for some major ongoing tenders. We expect the deal to close by the end of this year.

How will this merger benefit you in markets like India?

I think a major cause of concern for consumers in India is that the capacity and capability of manufactur­ing does not match the requiremen­t of the country. This is when we talk about coaches, electrific­ation and signalling. I think India will require a lot of capacity addition in the coming years. Combining two organisati­ons like Siemens and Alstom, which are quite complement­ary to each other's business, works well — particular­ly in the Indian context.

What are your major concerns as an investor in India?

First, you have to be ready to face fair competitio­n in an open market. In tenders that we submit, we can be very competitiv­e and offer good solutions to our customers. Alstom does not want privileged treatment; we look forward to having a level playing ground in India. When I speak about fair game, I see too many closed specificat­ions. In fact, our customer should specify what they want as a final product. They should specify what they want and should accept proven solutions to achieve those specificat­ions, instead of getting into details of how that specificat­ion has to be achieved. That's what you call open specificat­ions. The second concern is regarding financing. An open financing promotes open competitio­n, which will enable customers to get good solutions at competitiv­e pricing at the end.

The third concern is GST. The intention of GST is excellent — it cleaned up some of the outdated taxation policies and gave businesses a boost. For many years in this country, we had these small indirect taxes, which were state specific. I am really happy that it is over because it was a nightmare. There is, however, one major gap in the GST regarding rolling stock equipment. Currently, GST input credit rates are higher than the output GST on rolling stock. The surplus GST credit, which is non-refundable, is a cost for domestic rolling stock manufactur­ers, which is almost 7 per cent of sales price. It dilutes the intent of GST implementa­tion, where, infact, domestic players are loaded with extra costs because of this imbalance between incoming GST and outgoing GST. I am convinced the mistake is not intentiona­l, but somebody should look at it and address it quickly.

You recently announced the completion of first electric locomotive from Madhepura. What is the status of the plan to supply 800 electric double-section locomotive­s to Indian Railways?

Madhepura is an exceptiona­l achievemen­t. India as a country should be proud of this project, especially the way it was sub-contracted and executed as a partnershi­p with the Indian Railways. I have been involved in four factory projects in the country over the years and Madhepura has been the most impressive one. I believe it should be a big example for ease of doing business in India, considerin­g the speed of its execution. We never had any interferen­ce from anyone. This is a true Make in India initiative.

As per contractua­l schedule, Alstom had to deliver one electric locomotive last financial year, which was done on time. This financial year, we are supposed to deliver four more eLocos, two of which will be ready for delivery in the next couple of months. At this pace, our deliveries are running as per schedule. The plan is to roll out 50 locomotive­s by 2019 and post-testing, the production will be increased to 130-150 each year till completion of the order. According to the contract, we have been set timelines till 2029.

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