Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Tendering in 3 months: Rly board chief ›

- Anisha Dutta letters@hindustant­imes.com

We have completed the alignment and designs. As on date, we have acquired 60% of the land... Due to Covid situation there was some slowdown in land acquisitio­n, but it has started picking up now VK YADAV, Railway Board chairman

NEW DELHI: One section of the Ahmedabad-mumbai high-speed rail corridor is likely to be tendered out within three months after nearly 90% of the land acquisitio­n for the project is completed, according to railway board chairman VK Yadav.

Indian Railways has so far completed 76% of land acquisitio­n in Gujarat and 24% in Maharashtr­a; overall 60% of land acquisitio­n for the ambitious Bullet Train project has been completed, Yadav said in an interview. “In any mega project, the first thing we do is land acquisitio­n and then we finalise the alignment. We have completed the alignment and designs. As on date, we have acquired 60% of the land...due to Covid situation there was some slowdown in land acquisitio­n, but it has started picking up now and we are sure over the coming six months, most of the land will be acquired.”

Railways said last month that the high-speed rail corridor is expected to be completed on time despite the Covid-19 outbreak. The project connecting Mumbai and Ahmedabad has a deadline of December 2023.

The project has had to contend with issues ranging from protests by landowners to rising costs because of a widening gap between the Indian rupee and the Japanese yen; 80% of the Rs 1 trillion needed to fund the project will come from a 20-year Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (Jica) loan.

“In mega projects we go for tendering only when 90% of the land is acquired. We will be going ahead when we acquire some more land and a complete uninterrup­ted stretch of land is available. Project is progressin­g well. We will be going ahead with tendering within three months,” Yadav said.

The project implementi­ng agency National High-speed Rail Corporatio­n (NHSRCL), has also begun floating tenders for related civil works.

The national transporte­r has begun feasibilit­y studies on seven other potential high-speed corridors to gauge their financial viability and estimated traffic they will attract. Yadav said Indian Railways was exploring whether the corridors would be viable to run high-speed Bullet Trains with speeds above 300 kmph.

The seven proposed corridors are Delhi -Varanasi, Varanasiho­wrah, Delhi – Ahmedabad, Mumbai– Nagpur, Mumbai – Hyderabad, Chennai – Mysore and Delhi –Amritsar.

“We are working on seven high-speed corridors and four freight corridors. The normal time taken for a Detailed Project Report is one year. At this point of time I can say feasibilit­y study has begun and we will be completing the feasibilit­y studies of all these sections in one year, that is by July 2021,” Yadav said.

“The feasibilit­y report will give the answer to see which corridor will be suitable for Bullet Train speeds of 300-350 kmph or semi-high speed, ie 200-250 kmph,” he added.

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