What's new

Is Chennai losing out to SriCity?

Darmashkian

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Dec 19, 2012
Messages
1,137
Reaction score
2
Country
India
Location
India
Is Chennai losing out to SriCity?
Many firms are opting for SriCity in Andhra Pradesh, driven not only by the facilities there, but also due to a simultaneous slide in Tamil Nadu

sricity-k0X--621x414@LiveMint.jpg

SriCity is a manufacturing hub comprising a special economic zone of 2,700 acres and a domestic tariff area of 4,300 acres. Photo: Sharp Image

Chennai/Hyderabad:-

About a year ago, Isuzu Motors Ltd was scouting for a plot of land in India where it could open a factory. The Japanese auto maker wanted to set up its base in India from where it could export with ease to Thailand, its largest market for pick-up trucks.

The place it chose was near Chennai, but not in the Sriperumbudur-Oragadam belt, about 45km from the city, that is famous as the home to some major auto factories in India, including Daimler India Commercial Vehicles Pvt. Ltd, Hyundai Motor India Ltd, Renault-Nissan and Ashok Leyland Ltd.

Instead, Isuzu chose to set up in SriCity, just 55km further north, but in Andhra Pradesh, not Tamil Nadu. When Isuzu made the announcement in January, it became the latest in a long line of large multinationals that have opted to manufacture in SriCity rather than the industrial belts of neighbouring Tamil Nadu.

A host of companies have been opting for SriCity, driven not only by the latest facilities it offers, logistical ease and government subsidies, but also by a simultaneous slide in Tamil Nadu—marked by erratic power supply, delays and bureaucratic hurdles.
Central government financial aid in the process of creating Telangana state from Andhra Pradesh, in June last year, may also be a factor.

SriCity lies 55km from Chennai, an hour-and-a-half to two hours by car, depending on the traffic, on the national highway. It’s a manufacturing hub comprising a special economic zone (SEZ) of 2,700 acres and a domestic tariff area of 4,300 acres. Isuzu Motors is setting up a manufacturing unit at a cost of Rs.3,000 crore to make 50,000 pick-up trucks per year by 2016.

Construction work is proceeding apace in SriCity, evident from the yellow cranes and earth movers that are busy levelling the land at the Isuzu Motors factory and other locations.

Neighbouring Isuzu Motors is another Japan-based company, the Kobelco group that has set up three firms in India—Kobelco Cranes India Pvt. Ltd, Kobelco Construction Equipment India Pvt. Ltd and Kobelco Plate Processing India Pvt. Ltd. They are among around a dozen Japanese companies that have either set up or are in the process of setting up factories in the complex.

Piolax Inc., a Japanese auto parts company, opened in SriCity in spite of the fact that it needs to supply its goods to Nissan Motor Co. Ltd, whose unit is based in Oragadam. Under the public-private partnership model, the government of Andhra Pradesh has granted single-window start-up approvals for setting up in SriCity, along with functional infrastructure approvals.

A distance of 10km is covered within minutes along neatly laid two-way lanes and lined by plants on either side of the road, giving the place the look and feel of a well-planned industrial park. Having attracted private equity investments from Och-Ziff PE Fund, Credit Asia Capital, Bedrock Llc US and Chintalapati Holdings, SriCity has brought some benefits for other states—labourers from Bihar, Jharkhand and Odisha have been working on the parched land where factories are in different stages of construction.

“I get paid Rs.5,000 a month and send back money home to my family,” said 40-years-old Kirodh Chawan from Bihar, who works on a construction site near a Unicharm plant that makes MamyPoko Pants diapers.

Even Tamil Nadu is a beneficiary—the factory that is making coaches for the planned Chennai Metro is at Sri City. Alstom Transport has an order worth €243 million to supply train cars for Chennai Metro.

“We did not find the usual tangles a company would face while setting up a large facility; the Andhra Pradesh government played a proactive role and clearances were quick,” said a spokesperson for Isuzu Motors India Pvt. Ltd about the choice of location. “The combination of state-of-the-art Krishnapatnam port (in Andhra Pradesh) keeping view of handling larger capacity, good infrastructure and stable power, made us decide on SriCity,” he added.

Yes, we did consider Sriperumbudur and Oragadam industrial belts in Tamil Nadu but then the distance to Krishnapatnam would be longer. Routing it through Chennai port, which handles large volumes, would have been tougher,” said the spokesperson.

The distance between Krishapatnam and SriCity is 112km; the travel time is close to three hours.

The head of a leading Chennai-based auto component company, who did not want to be named said, “It takes an hour to fly to Chennai from Colombo, Sri Lanka, but to get the goods through the congested roads to Chennai port takes a day or more.


Chinta Sasidhar, managing director of Krishnapatnam Port Co. Ltd, said industries are opting for Andhra Pradesh because of congestion at Chennai and Ennore ports (in Tamil Nadu) on the one hand and greater availability of land and a proactive government in Andhra Pradesh on the other.

The cost of setting up a facility (in terms of real estate) is 35-40% cheaper in SriCity than in Chennai, with good infrastructure and single window clearance,
said Vikram Sharma, managing director, Kobelco Construction Equipment. The company was an early entrant in 2011.

Tamil Nadu Industrial Development Corporation, which identifies and promotes the establishment of large- and medium- sized businesses in the state, did not respond to Mint’s calls or email.

“Bureaucratic procedures have delayed projects but investing companies that put up with the Tamil Nadu government’s lethargy no longer do so. They just hop across to SriCity,” said the head of a Chennai-based manufacturing company, who did not want to be named.

Good infrastructure and accessibility to a sea port are the most important factors for multinational companies looking to set up a manufacturing facility, said N.K Ranganath, managing director of Grundfos Pumps India Pvt. Ltd, whose parent company is based in Denmark.

Proximity to a huge market like Chennai, easy access to Chennai and Tirupati airports, connectivity to Krishnapatnam port in the north and Ennore and Chennai in the south, as well as National Highway-5 and railways, is what makes SriCity and its adjoining areas attractive to industrialists, said K.V Ramana Reddy, zonal manager of the Andhra Pradesh Industrial Infrastructure Corporation (APIIC) for Chittoor district.

Reddy oversees Industrial Area Local Authorities (IALA), an extended arm of APIIC. IALA works with companies, helping them with their land and infrastructure requirements.

In August 2013, US multinational Mondelez International Inc., maker of Cadbury chocolates, said it will set up its largest international manufacturing facility in the Asia Pacific region and its largest chocolate manufacturing facility at SriCity. It is to house a multi-category food campus on 134 acres of leased land with a proposed investment of Rs.1,000 crore. Four months later, PepsiCo. India announced its largest beverage manufacturing unit at SriCity with an investment of Rs.1,200 crore.

So far, Sricity has attracted over 100 companies and signed memorandums of understanding (MoUs) for investments close to Rs.18,000 crore.

Presenting a counterpoint to Andhra Pradesh’s success with SriCity is the story of Tamil Nadu’s woes—one of a slowing economy compounded by political fights. In the last two years, Tamil Nadu’s economy has grown at the slowest rate among India’s 17 large states. The southern state’s growth rate fell by two-thirds to 4.14 % in 2012-13 from a galloping 13.12% in 2010-11, according to the Central Statistical Organization. Andhra Pradesh’s growth rate halved to 5.04 % in 2012-13 from 9.66% in 2010-11—partly a fallout of the agitation for a separate Telangana state.

In November 2012, J. Jayalalithaa, the then chief minister of Tamil Nadu—currently out on bail after being jailed and fined in a disproportionate asset case—blamed the previous Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) government for delays in the execution of a joint venture between Ashok Leyland and Nissan. She said her government had to sign a fresh MoU with the joint venture company that makes light commercial vehicles because although the agreement was signed in 2008 during the DMK’s tenure, land was not allotted till February 2011.

In 2012, she signed MoUs with 12 companies for investments worth Rs.20,925 crore, including pledges for Rs.4,500 crore by Indo Rama Synthetics (India) Ltd to set up a petrochemical unit, Rs.2,325 crore for a BGR Energy Systems Ltd-Hitachi Ltd joint venture, and Rs.4,100 crore by US-based paint maker PPG Industries Inc.

Pledged investments by auto and auto components companies Sundaram Clayton Ltd, TVS Motor Co. Ltd and Sundaram Auto Components Ltd were far lower—at Rs.700 crore over the next three years.

After large investments went to SriCity, Tamil Nadu slowly realized that the act of carving Telangana state out of Andhra Pradesh would make these two states more attractive investment destinations than itself.

Five months ago, Jayalalithaa wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, warning that any area-based concessions extended to Andhra Pradesh and Telangana will lead to a flight of capital and relocation of industries from neighbouring states. “Such concessions to new industries will render the existing industries, both in neighbouring States and even in the States where such concessions are granted, completely uncompetitive. These are grave risks which cannot be ignored,” Jayalalithaa said.

At the time of bifurcation in June, residual Andhra Pradesh was promised special category status for five years, which includes concessions on excise duty to attract industry, said Sasidhar of Krishnapatnam Port Co.

There are very few complaints to be heard about SriCity—other than insufficient residential accommodation and recreational and entertainment activities. There too, SriCity is working on providing more residential apartments—currently it has 101 rooms on a twin-sharing basis and 600 houses for workers and it is in the process of building two-bedroom apartments.

The only area of concern is an anticipated shortage of labour once the larger companies begin operations.
Currently, labour is sourced from the neighbouring villages of Tada, Varadaiahpalem, Sullurpeta, Arambakkam and Koduru.

And although the industrial SEZ promises continuous supply of power, factories have to run generators for a couple of hours every day. “Earlier, Tamil Nadu had an advantage in terms of power but with the state reeling under a power crisis, it does not present itself as good alternative,” said a company head in SriCity, who did not want to be named.
That may hold some lessons for SriCity as well.

“Yes, SriCity has attracted big names but only time will tell how it will manage with the availability of power supply and labour,” said Jai Subramaniam, co-founder of the consultancy Shop 4 Solutions.

Read more at: Is Chennai losing out to SriCity? - Livemint
 
The website of Sri City:-http://Integrated Business City | Sri City

The Wikipedia Page:-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sricity

& it's location..
SEZININDIA-map.png



Sri City will be very beneficial to AP for a long, long time if it's growth story continues to grow & expand..
& thankfully with the blessings of Tirupati Balaji & knowing CBN & his track record, the growth story will continute & hopefully become better.

Sri City will especially help the regions & people of Rayalaseema & Dakshin Andhra..
 
Is Chennai losing out to SriCity?
Many firms are opting for SriCity in Andhra Pradesh, driven not only by the facilities there, but also due to a simultaneous slide in Tamil Nadu

sricity-k0X--621x414@LiveMint.jpg

SriCity is a manufacturing hub comprising a special economic zone of 2,700 acres and a domestic tariff area of 4,300 acres. Photo: Sharp Image

Chennai/Hyderabad:-

About a year ago, Isuzu Motors Ltd was scouting for a plot of land in India where it could open a factory. The Japanese auto maker wanted to set up its base in India from where it could export with ease to Thailand, its largest market for pick-up trucks.

The place it chose was near Chennai, but not in the Sriperumbudur-Oragadam belt, about 45km from the city, that is famous as the home to some major auto factories in India, including Daimler India Commercial Vehicles Pvt. Ltd, Hyundai Motor India Ltd, Renault-Nissan and Ashok Leyland Ltd.

Instead, Isuzu chose to set up in SriCity, just 55km further north, but in Andhra Pradesh, not Tamil Nadu. When Isuzu made the announcement in January, it became the latest in a long line of large multinationals that have opted to manufacture in SriCity rather than the industrial belts of neighbouring Tamil Nadu.

A host of companies have been opting for SriCity, driven not only by the latest facilities it offers, logistical ease and government subsidies, but also by a simultaneous slide in Tamil Nadu—marked by erratic power supply, delays and bureaucratic hurdles.
Central government financial aid in the process of creating Telangana state from Andhra Pradesh, in June last year, may also be a factor.

SriCity lies 55km from Chennai, an hour-and-a-half to two hours by car, depending on the traffic, on the national highway. It’s a manufacturing hub comprising a special economic zone (SEZ) of 2,700 acres and a domestic tariff area of 4,300 acres. Isuzu Motors is setting up a manufacturing unit at a cost of Rs.3,000 crore to make 50,000 pick-up trucks per year by 2016.

Construction work is proceeding apace in SriCity, evident from the yellow cranes and earth movers that are busy levelling the land at the Isuzu Motors factory and other locations.

Neighbouring Isuzu Motors is another Japan-based company, the Kobelco group that has set up three firms in India—Kobelco Cranes India Pvt. Ltd, Kobelco Construction Equipment India Pvt. Ltd and Kobelco Plate Processing India Pvt. Ltd. They are among around a dozen Japanese companies that have either set up or are in the process of setting up factories in the complex.

Piolax Inc., a Japanese auto parts company, opened in SriCity in spite of the fact that it needs to supply its goods to Nissan Motor Co. Ltd, whose unit is based in Oragadam. Under the public-private partnership model, the government of Andhra Pradesh has granted single-window start-up approvals for setting up in SriCity, along with functional infrastructure approvals.

A distance of 10km is covered within minutes along neatly laid two-way lanes and lined by plants on either side of the road, giving the place the look and feel of a well-planned industrial park. Having attracted private equity investments from Och-Ziff PE Fund, Credit Asia Capital, Bedrock Llc US and Chintalapati Holdings, SriCity has brought some benefits for other states—labourers from Bihar, Jharkhand and Odisha have been working on the parched land where factories are in different stages of construction.

“I get paid Rs.5,000 a month and send back money home to my family,” said 40-years-old Kirodh Chawan from Bihar, who works on a construction site near a Unicharm plant that makes MamyPoko Pants diapers.

Even Tamil Nadu is a beneficiary—the factory that is making coaches for the planned Chennai Metro is at Sri City. Alstom Transport has an order worth €243 million to supply train cars for Chennai Metro.

“We did not find the usual tangles a company would face while setting up a large facility; the Andhra Pradesh government played a proactive role and clearances were quick,” said a spokesperson for Isuzu Motors India Pvt. Ltd about the choice of location. “The combination of state-of-the-art Krishnapatnam port (in Andhra Pradesh) keeping view of handling larger capacity, good infrastructure and stable power, made us decide on SriCity,” he added.

Yes, we did consider Sriperumbudur and Oragadam industrial belts in Tamil Nadu but then the distance to Krishnapatnam would be longer. Routing it through Chennai port, which handles large volumes, would have been tougher,” said the spokesperson.

The distance between Krishapatnam and SriCity is 112km; the travel time is close to three hours.

The head of a leading Chennai-based auto component company, who did not want to be named said, “It takes an hour to fly to Chennai from Colombo, Sri Lanka, but to get the goods through the congested roads to Chennai port takes a day or more.


Chinta Sasidhar, managing director of Krishnapatnam Port Co. Ltd, said industries are opting for Andhra Pradesh because of congestion at Chennai and Ennore ports (in Tamil Nadu) on the one hand and greater availability of land and a proactive government in Andhra Pradesh on the other.

The cost of setting up a facility (in terms of real estate) is 35-40% cheaper in SriCity than in Chennai, with good infrastructure and single window clearance,
said Vikram Sharma, managing director, Kobelco Construction Equipment. The company was an early entrant in 2011.

Tamil Nadu Industrial Development Corporation, which identifies and promotes the establishment of large- and medium- sized businesses in the state, did not respond to Mint’s calls or email.

“Bureaucratic procedures have delayed projects but investing companies that put up with the Tamil Nadu government’s lethargy no longer do so. They just hop across to SriCity,” said the head of a Chennai-based manufacturing company, who did not want to be named.

Good infrastructure and accessibility to a sea port are the most important factors for multinational companies looking to set up a manufacturing facility, said N.K Ranganath, managing director of Grundfos Pumps India Pvt. Ltd, whose parent company is based in Denmark.

Proximity to a huge market like Chennai, easy access to Chennai and Tirupati airports, connectivity to Krishnapatnam port in the north and Ennore and Chennai in the south, as well as National Highway-5 and railways, is what makes SriCity and its adjoining areas attractive to industrialists, said K.V Ramana Reddy, zonal manager of the Andhra Pradesh Industrial Infrastructure Corporation (APIIC) for Chittoor district.

Reddy oversees Industrial Area Local Authorities (IALA), an extended arm of APIIC. IALA works with companies, helping them with their land and infrastructure requirements.

In August 2013, US multinational Mondelez International Inc., maker of Cadbury chocolates, said it will set up its largest international manufacturing facility in the Asia Pacific region and its largest chocolate manufacturing facility at SriCity. It is to house a multi-category food campus on 134 acres of leased land with a proposed investment of Rs.1,000 crore. Four months later, PepsiCo. India announced its largest beverage manufacturing unit at SriCity with an investment of Rs.1,200 crore.

So far, Sricity has attracted over 100 companies and signed memorandums of understanding (MoUs) for investments close to Rs.18,000 crore.

Presenting a counterpoint to Andhra Pradesh’s success with SriCity is the story of Tamil Nadu’s woes—one of a slowing economy compounded by political fights. In the last two years, Tamil Nadu’s economy has grown at the slowest rate among India’s 17 large states. The southern state’s growth rate fell by two-thirds to 4.14 % in 2012-13 from a galloping 13.12% in 2010-11, according to the Central Statistical Organization. Andhra Pradesh’s growth rate halved to 5.04 % in 2012-13 from 9.66% in 2010-11—partly a fallout of the agitation for a separate Telangana state.

In November 2012, J. Jayalalithaa, the then chief minister of Tamil Nadu—currently out on bail after being jailed and fined in a disproportionate asset case—blamed the previous Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) government for delays in the execution of a joint venture between Ashok Leyland and Nissan. She said her government had to sign a fresh MoU with the joint venture company that makes light commercial vehicles because although the agreement was signed in 2008 during the DMK’s tenure, land was not allotted till February 2011.

In 2012, she signed MoUs with 12 companies for investments worth Rs.20,925 crore, including pledges for Rs.4,500 crore by Indo Rama Synthetics (India) Ltd to set up a petrochemical unit, Rs.2,325 crore for a BGR Energy Systems Ltd-Hitachi Ltd joint venture, and Rs.4,100 crore by US-based paint maker PPG Industries Inc.

Pledged investments by auto and auto components companies Sundaram Clayton Ltd, TVS Motor Co. Ltd and Sundaram Auto Components Ltd were far lower—at Rs.700 crore over the next three years.

After large investments went to SriCity, Tamil Nadu slowly realized that the act of carving Telangana state out of Andhra Pradesh would make these two states more attractive investment destinations than itself.

Five months ago, Jayalalithaa wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, warning that any area-based concessions extended to Andhra Pradesh and Telangana will lead to a flight of capital and relocation of industries from neighbouring states. “Such concessions to new industries will render the existing industries, both in neighbouring States and even in the States where such concessions are granted, completely uncompetitive. These are grave risks which cannot be ignored,” Jayalalithaa said.

At the time of bifurcation in June, residual Andhra Pradesh was promised special category status for five years, which includes concessions on excise duty to attract industry, said Sasidhar of Krishnapatnam Port Co.

There are very few complaints to be heard about SriCity—other than insufficient residential accommodation and recreational and entertainment activities. There too, SriCity is working on providing more residential apartments—currently it has 101 rooms on a twin-sharing basis and 600 houses for workers and it is in the process of building two-bedroom apartments.

The only area of concern is an anticipated shortage of labour once the larger companies begin operations.
Currently, labour is sourced from the neighbouring villages of Tada, Varadaiahpalem, Sullurpeta, Arambakkam and Koduru.

And although the industrial SEZ promises continuous supply of power, factories have to run generators for a couple of hours every day. “Earlier, Tamil Nadu had an advantage in terms of power but with the state reeling under a power crisis, it does not present itself as good alternative,” said a company head in SriCity, who did not want to be named.
That may hold some lessons for SriCity as well.

“Yes, SriCity has attracted big names but only time will tell how it will manage with the availability of power supply and labour,” said Jai Subramaniam, co-founder of the consultancy Shop 4 Solutions.

Read more at: Is Chennai losing out to SriCity? - Livemint


First thing, it is a 2 months old article.

Sri city is good in attracting investments from Chennai and Chennai is not losing to Sri City.

Mostly people from Chennai will be employed in Sri City.

Isuzu corporate office is at Chennai.

Already we have attracted future Hyundai, renault and nissan future expansion projects. Mahindra gonna invest 4000 crores in TN(MOU in May)

I am still surprised why Sri City corporte office is still located at Chennai even though AP has tirupati, vijayawada and vishakapattinam

When ever i see these articles kind about AP, i recall Volkswagen scandal, Caparo mega auto cluster park spread over 1500 acres, Semindia 3B $ semiconductor project....all big big big projects announcement by AP politicians and altast nothing...

Remember Chennai is a silent killer, already attracted biggies and still attracting, we do not use red carpet to industries as AP does now to attract investment.

Coming to electricity, TN is far better in electricity, not only electricity but also infrastructure and other stuff.

Conclucion: Sricity is more beneficial to Chennai than AP(just AP is gonna get Taxes)
 
First thing, it is a 2 months old article.

Sri city is good in attracting investments from Chennai and Chennai is not losing to Sri City.

Mostly people from Chennai will be employed in Sri City.

Isuzu corporate office is at Chennai.

Already we have attracted future Hyundai, renault and nissan future expansion projects. Mahindra gonna invest 4000 crores in TN(MOU in May)

I am still surprised why Sri City corporte office is still located at Chennai even though AP has tirupati, vijayawada and vishakapattinam

When ever i see these articles kind about AP, i recall Volkswagen scandal, Caparo mega auto cluster park spread over 1500 acres, Semindia 3B $ semiconductor project....all big big big projects announcement by AP politicians and altast nothing...

Remember Chennai is a silent killer, already attracted biggies and still attracting, we do not use red carpet to industries as AP does now to attract investment.

Coming to electricity, TN is far better in electricity, not only electricity but also infrastructure and other stuff.

Conclucion: Sricity is more beneficial to Chennai than AP(just AP is gonna get Taxes)

Electricity? We have no power cuts in AP for past year. Infrastructure? Damn Chennai has worst infrastructure. I have recently traveled along AP from Vijayawada to Chennai. As soon as we reach outskirts of Chennai, roads deteriorate considerably with shrubs and pot holes all over. You really have no idea how good roads are in AP relatively.
 
where is Sricity head office ? :-)
 
First thing, it is a 2 months old article.

I agree. it is 2 months old & just look at the progress the city has made in this much time:-
Andhra Pradesh’s Sri City emerges as new auto hub in India
US delegation finds Sri City promising - The Hindu
(More than nine US companies, including brands like PepsiCo, Cadburys, Colgate and Kellogg’s have set up their units in Sri City)
Ow.ly - image uploaded by @LetsBuildNewAP
50-member Japanese Govt-Biz -The New Indian Express
(The delegation, headed by economic development minister Akio Isomata, included top government officials and senior executives of prominent organisations and companies such as Fuji Electric Corporation, Hitachi, Hitachi Zosen Corporation, ITOCHU Corporation, Japan Research Institute, Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO), JGC Corporation, JICA, Kajima Corporation, Marubeni, Mitsubishi Electric Corporation, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Nikken Sekkei, Shimizu Corporation, Sumitomo Corporation, The Bank of Tokyo, Toshiba and Toyota.
The intent of their visit was to witness the existing infrastructure at Sri City, assess the business potential and explore the possibility of setting up industries there.)
Belgium’s Vermeiren Group NV’s facility at Sri City SEZ to attract Rs50 crore investment | Customs Today Newspaper
Quick and steady, SriCity adds to its brand value | Business Standard News
(The integrated business city comprising a special economic zone (SEZ), on the borders of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, was recently adjudged as one of the 100 most valuable brands of 2014, by the Asian brand rating and ranking company, World Consulting & Research Corporation (WCRC
A business to business brand, the integrated business city has been able to attract multinational brand owners such as PepsiCo and Mondelez International).
Location draws firms to Sri City
(In the past five years, 104 companies from 25 countries have set up shop in the Sri City. )
Sri City gets Govt nod for grant for electronics cluster | Business Line

& so on & on

Sri city is good in attracting investments from Chennai and Chennai is not losing to Sri City.
Read the above links & the article again. Also read the part about Krishnapatnam port carefully.

Mostly people from Chennai will be employed in Sri City.
Let me quote some statements from my above article:-
"SriCity has brought some benefits for other states—labourers from Bihar, Jharkhand and Odisha have been working on the parched land where factories are in different stages of construction.

“I get paid Rs.5,000 a month and send back money home to my family,” said 40-years-old Kirodh Chawan from Bihar,"

"labour is sourced from the neighbouring villages of Tada, Varadaiahpalem, Sullurpeta, Arambakkam and Koduru."

The labour is coming from South AP, Bihar, Odissa & jharkhand & as the city grows+more factories & plants come up. There will be a greater demand for labour which South AP can fulfill.
& Mostly people from Chennai.:- that's for now.. As the city continues to grow & more accomodation comes up(As mentioned in the article). People will start living in the city(Telugu & Non

Isuzu corporate office is at Chennai.
Then why is their plant in AP??

Already we have attracted future Hyundai, renault and nissan future expansion projects. Mahindra gonna invest 4000 crores in TN(MOU in May)

Congratulations to you & your state then :)

I am still surprised why Sri City corporte office is still located at Chennai even though AP has tirupati, vijayawada and vishakapattinam

Simple to get investments from Chennai :) :P Sri City is closer to Chennai(where many corporate offices are located) & the industrial belt of TN compared to Vijayawada & Vishakapatnam.. & Tirupati is a pilgrimage centre not a metropolitan city or a corporate/industrial hotspot
For the last 10 years, AP has seen some rather pathetic misgovernance & not much progress on the infrastructure+development front :( . And after YSR's death, the infighting in the Congress+ political instability in AP made it worse. That is why perhaps Tirupati isn't the place where it's located as there is a lot that needs to be done regarding infra there.

But rest assured, now that CBN is there. Things WILL Change :)

When ever i see these articles kind about AP, i recall Volkswagen scandal, Caparo mega auto cluster park spread over 1500 acres, Semindia 3B $ semiconductor project....all big big big projects announcement by AP politicians and altast nothing...

The ex-CM of TN & the CM of karnataka disagree with you :)
Why State Lost Hero MotoCorp Unit -The New Indian Express
Karnataka not losing industries to Andhra Pradesh, says CM Siddaramaiah - Economic Times
Treat State on Par With Telangana, AP, Siddaramaiah Tells Modi -The New Indian Express
Jayalalithaa opposes area-based tax concessions to Andhra Pradesh, Telangana - The Times of India
"After large investments went to SriCity, Tamil Nadu slowly realized that the act of carving Telangana state out of Andhra Pradesh would make these two states more attractive investment destinations than itself."

Why else would they write such letter's & ask such favours of the PM of India

The Bifurcation has literally ruined AP which has NO Capital & a huge fiscal deficit. It has turned a prosperous state poor.
Thankfully both the parties intend to fulfill the promises they made to AP when they divided United AP whether it be sooner or later

Read my above statement about AP's pathetic misgovernance, The last 3 CMs we had were either populists,corrupt, incompetent or too busy to save their chair from opportunists/ministers within their party

And Chandrababu Naidu is now the CM of AP not any Congressi or a corrupt thug.. He was the one who made Hyderabad a IT-Hub & the 6th Metro of India & what it is today
He was among the first who realised the use of IT & computers & how it could be used to increase efficiency & make governance better .
He was the one who envisioned the use of IT to make world-class infrastructure+projects & how it could be used to help the people. He also actively worked towards computerising & Modernising the Government of Andhra Pradesh.

Remember Chennai is a silent killer, already attracted biggies and still attracting, we do not use red carpet to industries as AP does now to attract investment.

Coming to electricity, TN is far better in electricity, not only electricity but also infrastructure and other stuff.

Coming to the first statement.. Congrats to you then :) .. But wait now the competition to TN has become better.. There are new governments in AP & Telangana.. Each of them determined to get more investments in the IT & manufacturing sector... CBN is already an expert at this & the IT minister of TG seems to be doing a good job at getting investment in IT & other sectos in the future

And coming to Electricity LOL!!
AP now has 24*7 Power. Thanks to CBN's lobbying & piyush goyal . ;)
24x7 electricity supply: AP govt inks MoU for launching 'Power for All' scheme from 2 Oct - Firstpost

So we are as good as TN if not better when it comes to power & regarding infrastructure & other stuff let me quote my article again:"
"The cost of setting up a facility (in terms of real estate) is 35-40% cheaper in SriCity than in Chennai, with good infrastructure and single window clearance"
“The combination of state-of-the-art Krishnapatnam port (in Andhra Pradesh) keeping view of handling larger capacity, good infrastructure and stable power, made us decide on SriCity,”-- Isuzu motors


& don't worry about infra. CBN has come & this time he is focusing more on manufacturing compared to his last term

Conclucion: Sricity is more beneficial to Chennai than AP(just AP is gonna get Taxes)

CONCLUSION:-
Sri City will be beneficial for AP & the Telugu People in the long term with CBN as the CM & a sensible govt. & a fantastic PM at the centre actively encouraging " Make in India" :) .
Also CBN's "Make in Andhra" (a subset of the original) will further help AP & this city(hopefully).

Also all the manufacturing companies in AP have the choice of using the state-of-the-art Krishnapatnam port which is also good for AP in the long term ;)

@wolfschanzze @Srinivas @Lord Zen @magudi @Tshering22 @JanjaWeed --> Please have a look at the article & give your comments please, I thought you would be interested & please forgive my mistake if I irritated you by tagging you

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
@magudi I think you would like to see this thread--> Singapore to plan and develop Andhra Pradesh's new capital
 
Last edited:
First thing, it is a 2 months old article.

Sri city is good in attracting investments from Chennai and Chennai is not losing to Sri City.

Mostly people from Chennai will be employed in Sri City.

Isuzu corporate office is at Chennai.

Already we have attracted future Hyundai, renault and nissan future expansion projects. Mahindra gonna invest 4000 crores in TN(MOU in May)

I am still surprised why Sri City corporte office is still located at Chennai even though AP has tirupati, vijayawada and vishakapattinam

When ever i see these articles kind about AP, i recall Volkswagen scandal, Caparo mega auto cluster park spread over 1500 acres, Semindia 3B $ semiconductor project....all big big big projects announcement by AP politicians and altast nothing...

Remember Chennai is a silent killer, already attracted biggies and still attracting, we do not use red carpet to industries as AP does now to attract investment.

Coming to electricity, TN is far better in electricity, not only electricity but also infrastructure and other stuff.

Conclucion: Sricity is more beneficial to Chennai than AP(just AP is gonna get Taxes)

Sri city surely can't beat chennai, I think they both complement each other in development of this region..

The Department of Electronics and IT of the Government of India has given its in-principle approval for the creation of an ‘electronic manufacturing cluster’ in the Sri City industrial township, near Chennai.

An official of Sri City said that the company has received “very serious enquiries” from a couple of Indian companies to set up units in the zone. He didn’t name them, but said they were suppliers to large electronics manufacturers.

The grant will help Sri City’s push to get electronics units to set up units in the township. In the seven years since it began offering developed plots on 99-year lease, Sri City has attracted 102 units from 26 countries and these units have invested ₹20,000 crore. They include marquee tenants such as Cadbury’s, Kellogs, Pepsi, Alstom, Colgate-Palmolive, Isuzu, Kobelco – “12 companies with global turnover of $12 billion each,” as Sri City’s promoter Ravi Sannareddy puts it.

Sri City gets Govt nod for grant for electronics cluster | Business Line


The new plants, which will initially entail an investment close to £50 million each, will come up at Sri City in Chittoor district (about 50km from Chennai), and at Mahindra World City in Jaipur, the company said in a statement on Thursday. The company has secured land for the two projects.


The Sri City plant will be operational first—by the second half of 2016, followed by the Jaipur plant. The two plants will generate 150 jobs locally,
the company said. Rexam’s Sri City plant will be located in the vicinity of PepsiCo Inc.’s largest beverage manufacturing plant in the country. The beverages and snack maker is investing Rs.1,200 crore in its Sri City plant.

Read more at: http://www.livemint.com/Companies/N1qpNwc2CMUS7RGdYafLUP/UKs-Rexam-to-set-up-plants-in-Andhra-Rajasthan-with-100-m.html?utm_source=copy


Belgium’s Vermeiren Group NV’s facility at Sri City SEZ to attract Rs50 crore investment | Customs Today Newspaper

Educational Institutions in Sricity..

maxresdefault.jpg


IFMR opens new campus in Sri City

AP: IFMR’s new campus in Sri City | Business Line

IIIT, sri city

CAMPUS.jpg

(campus is still under construction, they are working from a temporary campus)

Welcome to IIIT

pic_slider_5_4-940x349.jpg


Chennai school of business excellence, sricity

CSBE: AICTE Approved B-Schools, PGDM Two Year Courses, PGDM Colleges in Andhra, Postgraduate Program in Management, AICTE Approved Courses, Placement in Indian B-SchoolsChennai School of Business Excellence


 
Sri city surely can't beat chennai, I think they both complement each other in development of this region..

The Department of Electronics and IT of the Government of India has given its in-principle approval for the creation of an ‘electronic manufacturing cluster’ in the Sri City industrial township, near Chennai.

An official of Sri City said that the company has received “very serious enquiries” from a couple of Indian companies to set up units in the zone. He didn’t name them, but said they were suppliers to large electronics manufacturers.

The grant will help Sri City’s push to get electronics units to set up units in the township. In the seven years since it began offering developed plots on 99-year lease, Sri City has attracted 102 units from 26 countries and these units have invested ₹20,000 crore. They include marquee tenants such as Cadbury’s, Kellogs, Pepsi, Alstom, Colgate-Palmolive, Isuzu, Kobelco – “12 companies with global turnover of $12 billion each,” as Sri City’s promoter Ravi Sannareddy puts it.

Sri City gets Govt nod for grant for electronics cluster | Business Line


The new plants, which will initially entail an investment close to £50 million each, will come up at Sri City in Chittoor district (about 50km from Chennai), and at Mahindra World City in Jaipur, the company said in a statement on Thursday. The company has secured land for the two projects.


The Sri City plant will be operational first—by the second half of 2016, followed by the Jaipur plant. The two plants will generate 150 jobs locally,
the company said. Rexam’s Sri City plant will be located in the vicinity of PepsiCo Inc.’s largest beverage manufacturing plant in the country. The beverages and snack maker is investing Rs.1,200 crore in its Sri City plant.

Read more at: http://www.livemint.com/Companies/N1qpNwc2CMUS7RGdYafLUP/UKs-Rexam-to-set-up-plants-in-Andhra-Rajasthan-with-100-m.html?utm_source=copy


Belgium’s Vermeiren Group NV’s facility at Sri City SEZ to attract Rs50 crore investment | Customs Today Newspaper

Educational Institutions in Sricity..

maxresdefault.jpg


IFMR opens new campus in Sri City

AP: IFMR’s new campus in Sri City | Business Line

IIIT, sri city

CAMPUS.jpg

(campus is still under construction, they are working from a temporary campus)

Welcome to IIIT

pic_slider_5_4-940x349.jpg


Chennai school of business excellence, sricity

CSBE: AICTE Approved B-Schools, PGDM Two Year Courses, PGDM Colleges in Andhra, Postgraduate Program in Management, AICTE Approved Courses, Placement in Indian B-SchoolsChennai School of Business Excellence


I hope that the electronic clusters will attract big investments we need to make more electronics at home
 
I hope that the electronic clusters will attract big investments we need to make more electronics at home

There is practically 0 industrial environment for electronics manufacturing in India, govt. has to look in to this sector explicitly and puch in for investments....
 
@wolfschanzze @Srinivas @Lord Zen @magudi @Tshering22 @JanjaWeed --> Please have a look at the article & give your comments please, I thought you would be interested & please forgive my mistake if I irritated you by tagging you
It's interesting to find that Sri City is less than hour and a half drive from Chennai. Both Sri City & Chennai can develop together by getting more integrated with each other ( complimenting each other in manufacturing) & setting up an smart Industrial hub + creating a smartly planed Urbanized region without absolutely no trade/travel restriction between 2 states by getting rid of all the useless check posts.
 
Ever since lame duck Panneerselvam took over as Chief Minister, the TN govt has gone into stasis. Tamil Nadu is crumbling. I fervently wish Jaya takes over soon or else we're heading into the rabbit hole.
 
There is practically 0 industrial environment for electronics manufacturing in India, govt. has to look in to this sector explicitly and puch in for investments....

Indeed but recently that have agreed to create many Electronic clusters which will help us also UP(Noida) is surprisingly doing well in this sector
 
Ever since lame duck Panneerselvam took over as Chief Minister, the TN govt has gone into stasis. Tamil Nadu is crumbling. I fervently wish Jaya takes over soon or else we're heading into the rabbit hole.

sir, sri city is doing well from the initialization of this project and has nothing to do with the new developments in TN . It out paced many other sezs in attracting investments even during the pathetic rule of congress in united A.P
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom