Business Standard

19 highway projects up for rebids

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Anirban Chowdhury New Delhi

NHAI alters bid process, project terms to lower risk for potential investors.

After failing to get bids for over half of its highway projects last year, the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) has decided to put up 19 highway projects worth Rs 23,805 crore for rebidding next month through a new short-listing process.

Discarding the earlier method of bidding set up by the Planning Commission, the projects, covering 2,248 kilometres, will be offered through a two-stage process under which all companies that have been technically qualified will now be able to offer their financial bids, an NHAI official confirmed.
 

ON THE ROAD AGAIN
Highway projects being put up for rebidding
 Cost
(In Rs cr )
Km 
 PROJECTS TO BE RESTRUCTURED
 Ghaziabad-Aligarh1,458126
 Tirupati-Chennai88297
 Jaipur-Reengus37754
 Muzzafarpur-Dehradun1,251116
 Rohtak-Hissar83497
 Panikoli-Rimuli1,303163
 Chandikhole-Dubari-Talcher972133
 Rimuli-Rajamunda785106
 Jaipur-Tonk-Deoli1,184149
 Coimbatore-Mettupalayam55050
 Delhi-Agra2,110180
 Vijaywada-Rajamundry2,658198
 Belgaum-Dharwad70280
 Total  (A)15,0661,549
PROJECTS TO BE CONVERTED TO ANNUITY
 Sonbersa-Muzzaffarpur1,01389
 Mokama-Munger83170
 Khagaria-Purnea1,374140
 Gopalganj-Hajipur (2 Pkg)2,061155
 Patna-Buxor1,797125
 Khagaria-Bakhtiarpur1,663120
 Total (B)8,739699
 Total bids to be re-invited (A+B)23,8052,248

 

The projects are also being restructured from the build-operate-transfer (BOT) model to either a BOT-engineering procurement and construction (EPC) or an annuity model that will decrease toll considerably. This is meant to reduce the risk for companies involved in these projects.

Under the earlier bidding system, only six top companies were eligible for financial bids. They were chosen on the basis of a scoring system that included criteria such as net worth, revenue, global experience and number of projects handled.

Indian construction companies, however, strongly opposed the scoring system because it tilted the balance in favour of global companies. Smaller construction companies also found that they were being forced to tie up with international construction giants merely to qualify though they were taking all the risk.

“Also, the earlier procedure of selecting the top six took four months more than if the bidders are selected on the basis of a technical threshold,” said M Murli, General Secretary of National Highway Builders Federation of India.

NHAI, however, received bids for only 22 of the 60 projects up for bidding, of which only seven have been awarded.

An NHAI official said the remaining 19 projects would also be put for bidding in the next few months.

Six out of the 19 projects will be based on the annuity model. This means that the developer will not levy a toll on the road it builds to recover costs. Instead, investment cost and the margin of profit will be reimbursed by the government in tranches . For the remaining 13, the toll will be levied on the road stretch but users will not have to pay an extra toll on the use of bridges and other structures built on the highway stretch. That is because these will be built by the developer as an EPC project under which money will bepaid directly by the government

Experts, however, said the new norms may not attract bidders either. “You also have to remember that the configuration for the projects has not changed.

The costs are still the same and the viability gap funding has not been increased,” said Sanjay Sethi of Kotak Infrastructure. Viability gap funding refers to the government puts in the money to meet the gap between the projected cost and what the companies actually bid for.

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First Published: Apr 21 2009 | 1:24 AM IST

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