The Sunday Guardian

Naidu’s fighT wiTh waTer MinisTry May reaCh PM’s ear

Water Resources Ministry blocking the replacemen­t of the existing contractor of Polavaram irrigation project.

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and Transstroy belonged to TDP MP Rayapati Sambasiva Rao.

Difference­s between the Centre and the state have risen after the Water Ministry found that there had been a huge jump in the cost of the project from around Rs 15,000 crore to Rs 45,000 crore in the last three-and-ahalf years. On 29 May 2014, the NDA Cabinet passed an ordinance to merge 300 villages from seven revenue mandals of Khammam district in Telangana with Andhra so that the displaceme­nt problem won’t affect the project. In a special package to Andhra, the Centre in June 2016 announced that the Andhra government would be given the responsibi­lity of constructi­on and that it would reimburse the money to the state.

Since then, Naidu has set up a cell in his Chief Minister’s office and started monitoring the progress of constructi­on every Monday. Till now, the state has spent about Rs 14,000 crore and the Centre has reimbursed to the tune of around Rs 6,500 crore. Naidu set a deadline of December 2018 for completion of spillway of the project so that it can be showcased to people as its achievemen­t before the 2019 elections.

However, for the past three months, Naidu was unhappy with the pace of work of official contractor­s Transstroy, who bagged the contract in 2012 by then Kiran Kumar Reddy-led Congress government in AP. The contractor­s had run into financial and legal issues with around halfa-dozen sub-contractor­s and there is little scope for completion of the project before 2019 polls.

Transstroy and the subcontrac­tors had different versions for the delays and financial wrangles. Transstroy has lodged a complaint with the Union water resources minister on Naidu’s plans to remove them. The Ministry of Water Resources told CM Naidu and AP Irrigation Minister Devineni Uma Maheshwara Rao that it was not desirable to change the contractor­s at this stage as financial, logistical and legal implicatio­ns are involved. However, the Ministry of Water Resources promised to put pressure on the existing contractor­s to speed up works to meet 2019 deadlines.

However, as there was no improvemen­t in the works from Transstroy’s end, the AP government on 19 November issued fresh tenders for a clutch of works costing around Rs 1,460 crore. Again Transstroy objected to these tenders and complained to the Water Ministry. Based on it, Union Water Resources Secretary Amarjit Singh wrote a letter to AP chief secretary Dinesh Kuamr on 27 November, directing him to stop the fresh tender process as well as attempts to dislodge the existing contractor­s.

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