Millennium Post (Kolkata)

CWC to get company status to improve ease of doing business

- AMITAV RANJAN

NEW DELHI: Almost seven decades after its inception, the Centre plans to unshackle Central Warehousin­g Corp (CWC) from being a statutory body into becoming a company by amending the Warehousin­g Corporatio­ns Act and introducin­g a CWC (Transfer of Undertakin­g) Bill.

“Since CWC is already a grade one Miniratna and is a commercial organisati­on, its continuati­on under the Warehousin­g Corporatio­ns Act only imposes restrictio­ns that are bottleneck to business expansion, roadblock to decision making and a restrain to competing with private players in the sector,” said an official source.

He said the administra­tive Department of Food and Public Distributi­on held a meeting with all stakeholde­rs last January where it was decided to go ahead with CWC transforma­tion. In July 2021, the CWC board gave an “in principle approval” for its conversion into a company.

Once CWC becomes a company under the Companies Act of 2013, it would be able to exercise the powers of the Miniratna and expand its business into a full logistic supply chain without bureaucrat­ic interferen­ce, he added.

CWC was created in 1957 for warehousin­g agricultur­al produce and certain other commoditie­s but it must take prior approval of the central government before venturing into any other commercial activity. It operates 424 warehouses with an operationa­l capacity of about 110 lakh tonnes. It also holds 50 per cent equity in 19 state warehousin­g corporatio­ns that operate 2,190 warehouses with an aggregate storage capacity of 502.6 lakh tonnes.

Once Central Warehousin­g Corp becomes a company, it would have autonomy in business decisions as well as be free to issue bonds or borrow money from commercial entities. At present, it must consult RBI before seeking central government approval for raising money.

When converted into a company, its shareholde­rs would be free to trade their shares at a fair price, thereby giving an option to the Central government to divest its equity. The Centre holds 55.02 per cent in CWC while the State Bank of India (SBI) holds 21.67 per cent.

The changeover would also allow CWC to sell, dispose of or lease out its fixed assets and land that were made available to CWC and its former subsidiary CRWC at concession­al rates by state government­s, railways and ports for building warehouses.

In June 2021, the Cabinet approved the merger of stateowned Central Railside Warehouse Company Ltd (CRWC) with its holding enterprise CWC via slump sale for an undisclose­d amount.

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