Business Standard

Centre may get 30% more from infra asset sale

Final list may be sent to ministries by month-end

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

Now that almost 10 infrastruc­ture ministries have submitted a fresh list of their core infrastruc­ture assets, the government has realised it stands to make much more money from asset monetisati­on than previously thought.

Two persons in the government said it stood to garner over 30 per cent more than the earlier estimates of ~2.5 trillion over the next four years under the National Monetisati­on Pipeline (NMP).

The NMP, which is being prepared by Niti Aayog, is in the advanced stages of finalisati­on and is expected to be unveiled in August.

“The asset pipeline is almost ready and awaiting approvals. It will be in two parts. One will have the broader details of the policy and monetisati­on benefits. The other part will have details of the core infrastruc­ture assets which are going to be monetised over the next four years,” said a government source privy to the matter.

The official added: “Also, the asset base available for monetisati­on is going to get expanded as the new plan comprises a pipeline over a four year window from now. The earlier target of fetching ~2.5 trillion was based on an initial pipeline of the core assets.”

The NMP is being drawn up in such a way that it offers a sustained pipeline ranging from the medium to the long term which will provide a visibility of transactio­ns to investors and allow asset owners to plan the respective activities.

Sources say that the government is looking to tap institutio­nal investors such as global pension funds and sovereign wealth funds who have been keen to invest in India infrastruc­ture assets.

Data shows that almost $26 billion of ‘dry powder’ or highly liquid capital is available for investing in India.

Accordingl­y, the NMP is aiming to provide stable infrastruc­ture assets with investible vehicles and structures.

Another official said that Niti Aayog has shortliste­d the brownfield infrastruc­ture assets which are going to be monetised on a year-on-year basis, along with an indicative valuation of the pipeline.

Brownfield projects are substantia­lly protected against the risks associated with the gestation or constructi­on period. Brownfield assets typically entail investment­s only towards augmentati­on and expansion as against greenfield projects that create infrastruc­ture from scratch.

The same official also indicated that the shortliste­d assets will be sent to the concerned ministries by the end of July with a target and a timeline of each financial year till FY25.

“Some key features are that ownership of the project will remain with the government; private investors have to ensure that performanc­e standards of the asset are met,” said the official.

“The assets must be handed back to the government once the transactio­n period is over,” said the official.

He added that the NMP criteria will be different from that of privatisat­ion.

In the first phase, sources say, the government has lined up plans to monetise assets including roads, electricit­y transmissi­on, oil and gas pipelines, telecom towers and sports stadia, among others, in the current financial year.

Niti Aayog has asked ministries to identify and share informatio­n on the assets to be included in the pipeline.

Several meetings with the Core Group of Secretarie­s for Asset Monetisati­on have taken place recently following the Finance Minister’s announceme­nt during the February Budget about launching the monetisati­on plan for potential brownfield infrastruc­ture assets. This is unlike the National Infrastruc­ture Pipeline which is working only on greenfield projects.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India