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Highways development back on track in 2009

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Anindya UpadhyayNamita Tewari/PTI New Delhi
Last Updated : Jan 21 2013 | 12:54 AM IST
I / New Delhi December 14, 2009, 13:48 IST

In contrast to the lull in 2008, road-rollers and wheel loaders returned to action across the country as the government awarded highway projects worth Rs 20,000 crore in 2009 that saw Mumbai get India's first and longest open sea cable-stayed bridge.

Last year, highways regulator -- National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) -- failed to attract bidders for more than 80 per cent of its projects, citing global economic meltdown playing spoilsport. With a spurt in economic activity, Transport Ministry geared to float bids for another 24 projects by the end of the fiscal and is confident of getting a robust response, said an official.

The developments in the sector took place in the backdrop of a change of guard at the ministry in May this year, which formed an aggressive workplan of awarding 12,000 km of roads with an investment of Rs one lakh crore under the National Highways Development Programme (NHDP).

Again, the NHAI has a workplan of awarding an equal length of roads for development for the fiscal 2010-11 with an investment of Rs three lakh crore, Transport Minister Kamal Nath recently said. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh appointed a committee headed by Planning Commission Member B K Chaturvedi in the second half of the year to recommend ways and means for expediting highways projects especially projects under PPP mode.

The Cabinet Committee on Infrastructure (CCI) had recently accepted the Chaturvedi Committee recommendations, including lowering of technical experience required by companies to bid for road projects and changes in the agreement with the developers.

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Also, the government allowed company bidding for a road project to hold up to 25 per cent stake in a firm bidding for another project from 5 per cent earlier.

An expressway network for the country also seems to be on the cards with the government forming a master plan for its ambitious project of constructing 18,650-km long expressway network at an investment of Rs 3.35 lakh crore, excluding land acquisition costs.

Nath said he was expediting the process of setting up the Expressways Authority of India, which would look exclusively at the requirements of building roads to facilitate non-stop high-speed movement of traffic.

The minister also revealed his plans to award 10 'mega projects' — building roads that are more than 400 km long — worth Rs 45,000 crore over the next two years. These projects covering 4,000 km will be awarded on a revenue-share basis, under which the developers would pay a part of the toll earnings to the government.

The NHAI has already asked potential bidders to submit their initial 'request for qualification'(RFQ) documents for two of these 10 projects spread over Rajasthan, Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh.

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First Published: Dec 14 2009 | 1:48 PM IST

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