What's new

Border Infrastructure: Modi government driving strategic projects with radical changes

migflug

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Jun 5, 2014
Messages
1,102
Reaction score
4
Country
India
Location
India
Border Infrastructure: Modi government driving strategic projects with radical changes
Published May 17, 2015 | By admin
SOURCE : ECONOMIC TIMES

highway-pti.jpg


In the idyllic Andaman and Nicobar islands – fast emerging as India’s strategic and economic arm into the Indian Ocean – a small strip of sea separates Port Blair from the small but upcoming town of Bamboo Flat. On the mainland, up North the Jammu-Akhnoor road has for years been a choking point for traffic heading up to Poonch, including military convoys that service troops along the Line of Control. In the Northeast, trade connections with Myanmar and Bangladesh have for decades been held ransom to shoddy roads and poor infrastructure.

A radical new approach is now being adopted to accelerate projects to unclog these bottlenecks, along with work on hundreds of other strategic projects, as theNarendra Modi government sharpens focus on creating infrastructure along India’s borders. From the Bharat Mala project (it envisages a road network along India’s land boundary, stretching from Gujarat to Mizoram) to Sagar Mala (under which a coastal infrastructure will be set up along the nation’s vast shoreline), the government’s intention is clear: bring about a road and infra construction boom to help drive trade.

While the idea is not new, the approach has been different – a newly created corporation has been empowered to execute projects worth Rs 34,300 crore and has been freed of red tape that traditionally binds government agencies on mega projects. And, execution has been rapid with road projects of nearly 3,200 km activated in the past year.

Central to the change has been the creation of the National Highways & Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited (NHIDCL), which last year took over several projects from the Border Roads Organisation (BRO), mostly in the Northeast but also in a few other strategic areas. Its agenda is simple: create 10,000 km of roads by 2020 and revitalise India’s connections with the neighbourhood.

The changeover from BRO has been crucial – there are endless tales of roads passing deadlines by several years and construction costs quadrupling during execution.

“Efficiency and transparency are the two key areas we are focusing on. Using e-tools for project monitoring and awarding of contracts, and an efficient dispute-resolution mechanism have been (the highlight of) our approach,” says NHIDCL Managing Director Anand Kumar. Several critical projects have been fast-tracked, given the focus of the government on creating infrastructure.

Consider this: In Port Blair, a detailed study on what could be India’s first undersea transportation tunnel is set to commence soon. The idea is to construct a 1.5-kilometre tunnel connecting the capital of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands to Bamboo Flat. Oversea connection is impossible due to the heavy naval activity in the area.

A similar undersea project is also being planned in West Bengal, to connect Sagar Island and Kakdwip with a 3.5 km tunnel. In the Northeast, Union Minister Nitin Gadkari last month, dedicated the final Indian stretch of the Stilwell road, right up to the Myanmar border. The Asian Development Bank is preparing a project report on connecting Manipur’s capital Imphal with the town of Moreh near the border.Insiders say doing away with the old is central to the project. The Ministry of Road Transport & Highways has, for example, created a new working group last month that has just one agenda: approve new infrastructure construction technologies for use in India. The committee has been empowered to approve within a month any new, internationally proven, technology for use in India, doing away from the archaic way of clearances that would require years if not decades for approvals by the government.

Old challenges still remain, though, the biggest being land acquisition, costs of which have gone through the roof. “While in the past locals would pool resources together and offer us free land to construct roads, the demands in the Northeast for land that is virtually worthless are astounding, in some cases as much as 40 times the market value,” an official says. This may be a challenge that would take a lot to resolve. In fact, a lot depends on the ability of state governments to convince landowners on the value a road can bring to a region.

Another major focus of the new government agency is building regional connectivity to promote cross-border trade and commerce. The plan is to expand 500 km of roads in the northeastern region to enable transport with other South Asia Sub-regional Economic Cooperation member countries.

The connection between Imphal and Moreh is part of these projects. “All we need to connect Tripura to Chittagong is a bridge and a sea port would be available to the Northeast,” says Vijay Chhibber, secretary at the roads transport & highways ministry.

India is now planning to use international funding through NHIDCL to push through these border connectivity projects. While the Asian Development Bank funds are to be utilised to connect Imphal to Myanmar, funding from the Japan International Cooperation Agency is being planned to connect the Assam and Meghalaya borders to Bangladesh. The crucial bridge that could connect Tripura to the Bay of Bengal port of Chittagong in Bangladesh is also being planned through JICA funding.

The next two years will be critical to evaluate whether this new approach is working and at stake are India’s strategic linkages, and the future of trade in the region.
 
Will finish building China border infrastructure by 2018: Rao Inderjit
Published May 18, 2015 | By admin
SOURCE : EXPRESS NEWS SERVICE

rao-inderjit-l.jpg


Even as Prime Minister Narendra Modi pitches for strong economic ties with China, the Centre remains focussed on defence preparedness along the Line of Actual Control (LAC). The Defence Ministry has set itself a deadline of 2018 to complete infrastructure projects in Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh.

Refurbishing six Advanced Landing Grounds (ALGs) for military aircraft, building strategic railway lines, tunnels, and arterial roads leading up to the LAC are among the projects the government plans to “finish” before its term ends in 2019.

“The Chinese infrastructure is right up to the LAC, whereas we are at places 50-100 km away from the LAC. This is now being addressed. By 2018 — a year here or there — we plan to put the infrastructure in Arunachal Pradesh and the Northeast in place,” Minister of State for Defence Rao Inderjit Singh told The Indian Express.

Singh, who was Minister of State for Defence Production from 2006-09 in the UPA government, said the days of “policy paralysis” towards the Northeast were over. Singh visited forward areas in Arunachal and Sikkim last week, which followed Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar’s visit to the area at the beginning of the month.

“The Border Roads Organisation has been brought solely under the Defence Ministry… and has been given strict deadlines. The DG, BRO will be monitoring the progress of these projects every three months and submitting the reports to me. I will be personally monitoring the progress by the year-end,” Singh said.

The six ALGs, the Minister said, had fallen into disuse and been encroached upon by local people, but they would be made fully operational by the end of the year, and their 1,200-metre runways would allow military and civilian jets. The Air Force currently bases its Sukhois at Tezpur and Chabua in Assam. Singh said an idea of building “missile resistant tunnels” was also under consideration.

While the government recently slashed the budget for the mountain strike corps being raised in the Northeast, Singh said the commitment to raising the unit remained unaffected. “It was decided that the Northeastern borders will be guarded by sons of the soil and I am happy to say that two battalions of Sikkim Scouts have already been raised and Arunachal Scouts are being made ready… Initially there was a challenge raising the first battalion of Sikkim Scouts. But now we have raised even the second,” he said.

Changes in blacklisting policy
A year after it was announced that the blacklisting policy would be changed, Singh said the amendments had been more or less finalised, and the Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) was likely to approve it “anytime now”.

“We are trying to reverse the trend. Only in extreme conditions will a company be blacklisted,” the Minister said. “Also, if there are three-four subsidiaries of a company, and if one has indulged in wrongdoing, the others can continue supplying.”

He added that the appointment of agents — or ‘representatives’, as Defence Minister Parrikar has called them on several occasions — would be “recognised”, and they would be “held responsible” for wrongdoings. The difference with the previous government, Singh said, was that “we don’t go to the CBI” often. There was consensus within the government that a “decision taken in national interest” should not result in anyone going to jail.

One rank, one pension
Singh said the government has “arrived” at a figure, and the “Defence Minister will be making the formal announcement any moment”. He said the government had consulted all parties involved in the decisionmaking, and “we are hopeful that we have been able to cater to everyone’s expectations”.

Parrikar had indicated on Saturday that the OROP — earlier stuck in the Finance Ministry due to disagreement over monetary allocations — was more or less final. The formula applied by the Services was reaching a higher figure, while the one used by the Controller General of Defence Accounts (CGDA) was producing a lower figure. That deadlock has been resolved now, Singh said.
 

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Military Forum Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom