The Free Press Journal

Finance issues to not hamper Bharatmala project: Official

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Conceding that government is facing bottleneck­s like dearth of working capital availabili­ty for its ambitious Bharatmala scheme, the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) is working on a system to ensure that project execution is not hampered, a top official said at an ASSOCHAM event held in New Delhi.

“We are working on how to implement the project in a fast manner, we have to find ways and means to shrink the time it takes to execute a project, one of the bottleneck­s we are facing is working capital availabili­ty,” said Rohit Kumar Singh, member-finance, NHAI while addressing an ASSOCHAM national conference, ‘Sureties and guarantees: A global way to manage working capital.’

“There is an element of mobilisati­on advance which is 10 per cent of the project cost that is given but beyond that during the constructi­on project implemente­rs are facing problems of working capital,” he said.

Singh added, “We are working on a system as to how to facilitate a contractor with adequate checks and balances so that during the life cycle of the project he does not unduly suffer from lack of working capital and it does not hamper the execution of the project.” He also informed that there are more than 65 projects that have been bid out under the public-private partnershi­p (PPP) mode and that are ready to be rolled out and some work has already started on certain road projects.

The NHAI official further informed that bids are due from internatio­nal bidders on January 7 for a set of highways which are complete and running with six in the eastern part and 4 in the western part being clubbed as a bundle which has been bid out to internatio­nal investors.

“We hope that these nine highways with 10 toll plazas are going to fetch us more than USD 1 billion in the order of Rs 6,700 crore as a money which will come to us in March if the bids are successful which we will further infuse in our highways which are non-viable for PPP kind of investment, this is also called internatio­nally a way to recycle assets,” said Singh. He also credited the current government for focusing on resolving over 100 stuck projects. “I am very glad to inform that out of 103 projects that were stuck, there are only 3-4 projects that are facing problems and mostly because of judicial interventi­ons.”

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