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What happened to Modi's 100 smart cities?

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This is yet another case of Indians overpromising and under-delivering.

Modinomics | Just 10% of all projects under Smart Cities Mission completed; land acquisition remains a challenge
The Mission aims to tackle problems faced in urban areas such as transportation, energy supply, governance, basic urban infrastructure services and overall quality of life
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The 100 Smart Cities Mission was launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on June 25, 2015. Under the mission, the Centre allocates Rs 500 crore to each of the cities for implementing projects proposed by it. This amount is matched with a grant of the same amount by the respective state.

The mission aims to tackle problems faced in urban areas such as transportation, energy supply, governance, basic urban infrastructure services and overall quality of life.

It aims at providing technology solutions such as surveillance systems to reduce crime and improve safety of residents. Projects related to e-governance, mobility, integrated traffic management and solid waste management are also part of the mission.

The process starts with the formation of implementing agency, a special purpose vehicle (SPV), promoted by the state/union territory and the urban local body, with a 50 percent equity shareholding each.

The initiative is two-pronged—greenfield (new) cities get built smart since a large component of their infrastructure is yet to come up, and brownfield or existing cities with well-established economic and social engines get ‘smartened’ through incremental improvements in existing infrastructure.

Under the mission, each state had to identify qualifying cities for central funds based on a proposal. Once shortlisted, cities would receive a grant of Rs 100 crore per year for five years.

Under the SCM, 100 smart cities have so far been selected in four rounds based on an all India competition.

According to urban affairs and housing ministry, since the launch of the mission, a total of 5,151 projects worth more than Rs 2 lakh crore have been identified for implementation by the cities, which are in various stages of implementation in the 100 cities.

As many as 534 projects worth Rs 10,116 crore have been completed and implementation has commenced for 1,177 projects worth Rs 43,493 crore while tendering has started for 677 projects worth Rs 38,207 crore.

Under the mission, setting up of integrated command and control centres (ICCC) for each city is a vital step. The centres control and monitor online water and power supply, sanitation, traffic movement, integrated building management, city connectivity and internet infrastructure.

At present, 11 cities have operational ICCCs; centres in 29 cities are under construction; while tenders for 21 more have been processed. Projects worth Rs 1,558 crore in 11 cities have been completed so far.

The Smart Cities Mission is still very much a work in progress. According to a report by ANAROCK, there are bottlenecks preventing the speedy implementation of these projects. Some of the challenges in India are doubtlessly related to hard issues such as land acquisition, buy-in from resistant stakeholders.
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The Modi Years: How close is India to getting 100 Smart Cities?
Progress has been slow. Projects have been limited to small areas.
Shreya Roy ChowdhuryPublished Jan 26, 2019 · 02:45 am
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Design | Anand Katakam
  • 100 cities selected for Rs 500 crore central grant
  • Only small pockets and populations in each city stand to benefit
  • Critics call it ‘smart enclave scheme’
  • Slow progress as only 1.83% of the funds utilised till March 2018
  • Many cities have seen evictions and displacements
Building 100 smart cities was an election promise of the Bharatiya Janata Party in 2014. After coming to power, the Modi government allocated Rs 7,060 crore for this purpose in its first budget. It formally launched the Smart Cities Mission in June 2015, with an allocation of Rs 48,000 crore. Over the next two years, 100 cities were selected for central grants of Rs 500 crore each.

The mission guidelines acknowledge there is “no universally accepted definition” of a smart city. But the mission objective is described as promoting “cities that provide core infrastructure and give a decent quality of life to its citizens, a clean and sustainable environment and application of ‘Smart’ Solutions.”

The core infrastructure must include the assured supply of water, power, sanitation, solid waste management, public transport and affordable housing “especially for the poor”. The smart solutions are largely technology-based interventions such as traffic management using cameras and public transport using mobile applications and the Global Positioning System or GPS.

But critics say the mission is creating “smart enclaves” at best. Analysis by the Centre for Policy Research shows small slices of land benefitting small fractions of the population in the selected cities are set to claim around 80% of the total funding under the Smart City Mission.

Analysis by the non-profit Housing and Land Rights Network shows many of the winning cities’ proposals do not contain anything for marginalised sections and do not even mention affordable housing.

Progress is implementing the mission has been slow – only 1.83% of the funds released by government had been utilised till March 2018.

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How were the cities selected?
In 2015, the ministry of urban development solicited proposals from municipal corporations and state governments outlining the smart city projects they wanted to implement.

The ministry capped the number of cities that could be selected from one state based on the size of its population and the number of towns located there.

Twenty cities were selected in the first round in January 2016, followed by three more rounds in September 2016, June 2017 and January 2018, taking the tally to 100 cities. The total number of approved projects is 5,151.

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How are smart city projects funded?
The cost of the winning proposals range from a little over Rs 777 crore for Port Blairto around Rs 6,200 crore for Chandigarh, later revised to Rs 5,600 crore.

Each city gets Rs 500 crore of central funds, matched equally by the state, as seed funding. It must raise the rest of the money independently to implement its plans.

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The ministry’s document on the financing of Smart Cities lists a number of ways a local body may raise funds – user-charges, public-private partnerships, borrowing from financial bodies, municipal bonds and convergence with other schemes.

The Pune municipal corporation issued municipal bonds in June 2017, a move that came with increase in taxes and user-charges. In Udaipur, citizens protested against a fivefold increase in charges for water and electricity.

Analysis by the Centre for Policy Research shows that almost 70% of the funds are “sourced from public sources”. In the winning proposals in successive rounds, there is a “reduction in reliance on market-based sources of finance”.

What forms can the development take?
Smart city development can take two main forms – area-based development, which is limited to small pockets of urban territory, and pan-city development, which extends to the entire city.

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Area-based development can range from:

  1. Retrofitting – installing services and utilities within a pre-existing colony
  2. Redevelopment – wholesale razing of existing development to rebuild
  3. Greenfield projects – setting up a smart area and a previously vacant one
While some cities such as Bhubaneswar has settled mainly on retrofitting, Bhopal has undertaken a complete redevelopment of its project area.

Most pan-city development projects involve the use of “technology, information and data” to improve services. In many cities, this has translated into mobile application based, GPS-enabled public transport and bike-sharing systems.

According to the Ministry’s website, area-based development projects across the 100 cities are worth Rs 1,64,204 crores while the pan-city ones amount to just Rs 38,914 crores.

This is why the Housing and Land Rights Network has criticised the mission as the “smart enclave scheme”. Analysis done by the non-profit shows the percentage area of the total city covered by area-based development varies from 61% in Kavaratti, Lakshadweep to just 0.3% in Ludhiana, Punjab. With the area, the impacted population also varies widely – from 77% in Port Blair, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, to just 0.8% in Pune.

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In Chandigarh, the city with the maximum budget outlay for smart city projects, a single sector is getting 90% of the proposed budget of Rs 5,600 crore.

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What is the progress so far?
Despite cities having some plans ready from even before they are selected, progress has been slow.

Till February 2017, just 3% of the approved projects had been completed.

By July 2018, this had gone up to 21.56% of approved projects.

By December 2018, the number of completed projects had risen to close to 33%.

However, in terms of funding, the completed projects represent a small fraction of the total. In July 2018, a report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee that examines the work of the urban development ministry said that only 1.83% of the funds released by government had been utilised till March 2018. By December 2018, 50% of the first 20 Smart Cities had not utilised even 50% of their funds.

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The ministry told Parliament in December that the pace of completion picked up in 2018. It attributed the delay to the time taken – 12 to 18 months – to set up the special body the scheme requires states and cities to form to execute the plans.

Who runs smart cities?
To implement the smart city projects, the winning city needs to set up a “Special Purpose Vehicle” in the form of a company under the Companies Act 2013.

Special purpose vehicles were also formed under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission, the United Progressive Alliance government scheme which was the precursor to the Smart Cities Mission. Multiple companies were created for the implementation of specific projects, mostly infrastructure ones.

Under the Smart Cities Mission, however, only one company is formed to handle every type of project in a particular city. For example, the Bhopal Smart City Development Corporation will own and manage everything from roads, sanitation, housing and parking in certain areas of the city, which will no longer come under the purview of the Bhopal Municipal Corporation.

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Each company’s board will have nominees of the government of India, the state government and the municipal corporation. Private parties and financial institutions investing in the company can be members, provided the majority membership lies with government. The special purpose vehicle does not require any elected representative.

Urban development experts and activists say this creates a potential conflict with the municipal corporation, an elected body whose members are answerable to the public.

“The Smart City Mission appears to bypass the democratic process,” said Persis Taraporevala, a researcher currently pursuing her PhD on the subject.

In Bhopal, there has been friction between the smart city corporation and local politicians. In Pune, however, elected representatives have been included in the board.

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Activists fear that the functions of the municipality will slowly shift to the Smart City company and the private members on the board could gain enough power to influence all aspects of governance.

Who gets space in smart cities?
The Housing and Land Rights Network studied the smart city proposals from a human rights perspective and found questionable approaches to migrant labour and the homeless. While some cities proposed to build shelters and low-cost accommodation, others advocated strict action against any form of “squatting” and “encroachment”.

The proposals lack “concrete plans on how housing will be provided to the urban poor and the most marginalized individuals, groups, and communities”.

On the ground, the project has led to evictions and displacement in several cities.

Read more

Who’s the Smart City for? As India develops its decrepit urban centres, the poor have to suffer

Everything you wanted to know about Narendra Modi’s 100 smart cities

This article is part of The Modi Years series which recaps the major milestones, controversies and policies of the BJP government.

Support our journalism by subscribing to Scroll+ here. We welcome your comments at letters@scroll.in.
 
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Modi has even failed to clean ganga which Hindu worship...
This would be the most easy task but he totally failed. Apart from some social media ads nothing happens on ground. It is still a dumping site
This is really sad.
 
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Modi has even failed to clean ganga which Hindu worship...
This would be the most easy task but he totally failed. Apart from some social media ads nothing happens on ground. It is still a dumping site
This is really sad.
It is easy said, how to avoid industrial waste.?
 
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This would be the most easy task but he totally failed. Apart from some social media ads nothing happens on ground. It is still a dumping site
This is really sad.

Project's are been implemented in India not in Pakistan :-).
 
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It is easy said, how to avoid industrial waste.?
I think when you consider the river your god and worship it..
It is your holiest site .
Then Hindus can solve the issue.. After all the world is doing it. And you have no shortage of money with 3rd largest economy.
Or is only tata and birlia are rich and Indian government and people are still poor and hungry..
 
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Modi has even failed to clean ganga which Hindu worship...
This would be the most easy task but he totally failed. Apart from some social media ads nothing happens on ground. It is still a dumping site
This is really sad.

Slow and steady wins the race. We are still in the second decade of this century. The river will be cleaned eventually, I hope.
 
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It's always "next five years" and "five more years after that..." So on and on... Talk is easy and cheap.

As much as we would like to oppose you, you clearly seem to not understand Indian system of politics. It is inefficient and slow and takes a lot of time. Modi can put pressure but bureaucrats know how to keep projects in loops.

That's how they keep their importance.

I have had some interactions with bureaucrats where we had proposed a tourism promotion through the channels with whom I work. My entire 3 months of vacation time went in running between Delhi and Gangtok and nothing really happened - because it never reached the PM, from his juniors.

Unless there is a war where automatic emergency is declared, bureaucrats will never complete anything as ordered.
 
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As much as we would like to oppose you, you clearly seem to not understand Indian system of politics. It is inefficient and slow and takes a lot of time. Modi can put pressure but bureaucrats know how to keep projects in loops.

That's how they keep their importance.

I have had some interactions with bureaucrats where we had proposed a tourism promotion through the channels with whom I work. My entire 3 months of vacation time went in running between Delhi and Gangtok and nothing really happened - because it never reached the PM, from his juniors.

Unless there is a war where automatic emergency is declared, bureaucrats will never complete anything as ordered.

So you are saying that Modi's 100 smart cities will never be built?
 
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So you are saying that Modi's 100 smart cities will never be built?

It will definitely be built.

Given the crazy focus on technology and related urbanisation requirements in India, Smart Cities are just the next course of evolution for all of the currently identified cities. What I am saying is that it will take quite a long time and will need steady support of leaders like PM Modi himself who has a grand vision for developing the country's infrastructure and make public services accessible to maximum number of Indians.

For example, you are likely to see 10 smart cities first as a pilot project and then assess them for a period of 10-15 years, to identify cracks and teething issues, and then once resolved, just replicate the remaining at a much faster pace.

It is easy said, how to avoid industrial waste.?

It is all about a mix of will power from the government and environmental conscience from the citizens.

Cleaning river is not just the government's responsibility; but also that of the people that inhabit the area and the factories and shopowners who use the river for whatever purposes.

  1. Issuing a non-bailable ultimatum to the industries that are around to relocate should be pursued. If the industries are there for over the deadline to relocate, they should be closed and their owners should be arrested without any warrant or court proceedings.
  2. The people living on the banks need to be rehabilitated through a simple re-habilitation programme that they follow when clearing areas around dams and dykes; those having kutcha houses, should be offered portacabin houses till a proper arrangement can be made for them.
  3. A 3-year plan needs to be issued on priority about studying the situation of the river and the pollutants that affect it; the direction change that it has faced; the obstacles and the impurities that are there etc by a PRIVATE research firm commissioned with FULL AUTONOMY.
  4. Uma Bharti need to see this personally leaving everything else; More likely Uma Bharti needs to be given a deadline or be forced to resign not just from the post but also leave the ruling party and the government for good. No excuses.
  5. There are many companies in Germany and Israel who have replicated their success of cleaning their water bodies and making them potable. We should then contract them with a hard-stop deadline to clean the river at the earliest with direct monitoring of specially-commissioned officers from IFS and IWAI.
Some of this may sound "un-sarkari" and "un-constitutional" but it has to be done at that pace.

Also people need to hold their CMs accountable. The amount of local politician worship in most parts of India is disgusting.

Whether it is south or north or east or west, politicians need to be reminded that htey work for people; not hte other way around.
 
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it will never happen if current form of govt continues
 
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I am sorry to burst some people's bubbles here.

I travel to Chennai and Coimbatore a lot and I have personally seen the developments most of them are still on works.

1. Decongesting traffic and making the road one way to enable pedestrian shops.
2. Building / renovating and expanding the storm drain capacity.
3. Integrated transport system. ( Metro / Bus / Local trains to have good connectivity).
4. New and improved buses (switching to Hybrid) with plans to switch to completely electric by 2025.
5. Inspection for a metro in Coimbatore and the budget for the same has been allocated and soil inspection / route / initial land acquisition is already in progress.
6. 24/7 Road traffic monitoring using cameras and fines are sent to the registered owner automatically this was tested during the new year celebration. :p:

There are lots of works which are happening in the background. As usual, the Indian media is ignoring South. And what else would we expect from a congressi stooge Scroll.in
 
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Slow and steady wins the race. We are still in the second decade of this century. The river will be cleaned eventually, I hope.

Atleast 70% of Ganga shall be cleaned by this March. Those who have seen Ganga has said that the Ganga they saw is the cleanest they ever saw. There are many such news but I don't want to post them now. Let Looser enjoy who do not have even water to drink.

As much as we would like to oppose you, you clearly seem to not understand Indian system of politics. It is inefficient and slow and takes a lot of time. Modi can put pressure but bureaucrats know how to keep projects in loops.

That's how they keep their importance.

I have had some interactions with bureaucrats where we had proposed a tourism promotion through the channels with whom I work. My entire 3 months of vacation time went in running between Delhi and Gangtok and nothing really happened - because it never reached the PM, from his juniors.

Unless there is a war where automatic emergency is declared, bureaucrats will never complete anything as ordered.

Are you from Gangtok? I want to visit it.
 
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