India to seek foreign investment in giant, creaking rail network

AVERAGE INDIAN

EXORCIST
Senior Member
Joined
Sep 22, 2012
Messages
3,326
Likes
5,408
Country flag
India will soon invite foreign businesses to help expand its once-mighty but now outdated railways, government sources said, in a move that would mark the opening up of one of the country's last great state-controlled industries.

Foreign investors will be allowed to fully own new services in suburban areas, high speed tracks, and connections to ports, mines and power installations, said two senior officials involved in the deliberations.

Existing passenger and freight network operations will not be open to foreign investors under the initiative, which seeks to ease bottlenecks that slow travel on the world's fourth-largest rail system.

"The plan is to allow 100 percent foreign direct investment in suburban corridors, high-speed train systems, freight line projects implemented through public-private partnership," said an official at the Department of Industrial Policy & Promotion.

The government officials said the move could attract up to $10 billion of foreign investment over the next five years.

Previous targets to attract private investment to build India's infrastructure have been missed by a wide margin, but there were positive initial responses from potential investors such as General Electric Co and Bombardier.

Established under British colonial rule, India's vast train network has been overtaken by China's rapid rail expansion over the past two decades.

Indian train travel is very cheap, and transports some 25 million passengers daily. But years of underinvestment mean the service is slow and plagued by frequent accidents, most recently a fire that killed nine people this week.

Freight charges are pegged far higher to subsidise the passenger services, driving much cargo transport onto clogged roads.

SLOW TRAIN

In the 66 years since independence, India has added 13,000 km (8,077 miles) of new railway lines bringing the total size to about 64,000 km (39,767 miles).

Only 1,750 km (1,087 miles) of new lines were added by India from 2006 to 2011, compared with 14,000 km (8,699 miles) by China, according to a report by the Ernst & Young.

Consequently, road transport as a share of freight traffic has gone up to about 60 percent in India compared with about 44 percent in the United States and 22 percent in China, government and industry data shows.

The reform, which does not need parliamentary approval, has been agreed by the railways, industry and finance ministries and has been submitted for consideration by the cabinet, which could sign off on it as soon as next week, said one official. Parts of the cabinet note were seen by Reuters.

The plan is one of a series of moves the ruling Congress party hopes will help spur India's economy out of a deep slump ahead of a general election due by May in which it is expected to struggle to hold off the challenge of the opposition BJP.

Railway ministry officials expect interest from Chinese firms such as CSR Corp Ltd, Germany's Siemens, as well as Japanese manufacturers that already work in India as contractors and suppliers to the railways.

The proposal was greeted enthusiastically by Canada's Bombardier, which in 2008 set up a 33 million euros ($44.88 million) factory in Gujarat state to build trains for Delhi Metro and plans exports to other Asian markets.

"Bombardier is bullish about the demand and the future prospects of Indian rail transportation industry," said Harsh Dhingra, chief country representative, Bombardier Transportation.

"Multinational companies from North America, Europe, the U.S. and Japan have shown a long-term commitment to set up a base and invest in India to cater to the future demand in the sector."

India's rail wagon manufacturers were also enthused by the plans and expect to set up joint ventures with foreign players.

"Obviously we will be interested in a joint venture. We are positioning ourselves for that. We expect it will bring very good business opportunity for us as well as for the country," said Sandeep Fuller, the CEO of Texmaco Rail & Engineering Ltd, a Kolkata-based wagon manufacturer.

LIBERALISATION PUSH

India has opened industries including retail, civil aviation, pharmaceuticals, telecommunications and defence to foreign investors in recent years, with the goal of improving the nation's finances and driving economic growth.

The liberalisation has had mixed results, with supermarkets especially complaining that red tape, politics and corruption make it difficult to do business in India.

FDI inflows during the April-October period were down 15 percent from a year earlier at $12.6 billion, despite the opening of new sectors.

The involvement of foreign firms in the main rail network is currently restricted to exporting rolling stock, signalling systems and engines to Indian Railways, a state-run behemoth that employs around 1.4 million people.

Trade unions and many political parties oppose allowing foreign investment in railways, and Chinese participation in particular could raise suspicion in security circles. India, which fought a brief war with China in 1962, is cautious about its growing role in the Indian economy.

In the past, the government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has backed off liberalisation policies in the face of public and political opposition.

According to local media reports, in October, India rejected bids from two Chinese companies -- CSR Corp and China CNR Corp -- to set up locomotive plants under the public-private partnership model.

Current policy only allows direct foreign investment in urban metro projects.

Any investors in building track will still have to overcome the administrative hurdles such as project approvals and land disputes that meant investment by private Indian companies in railways has not met government goals.

In the five-year period to April 2012, the railways only saw 4 percent of $16 billion investment targeted through public-private partnerships.

General Electric Co, the world's largest maker of diesel locomotives, said it would prefer a public-private partnership to make locomotives with Indian Railways for new projects, but despite a lot of discussion, "progress has been very slow".

The U.S. company said it would welcome any steps to open India's railways to foreign investment.

"Any fresh impetus to expedite private sector participation on existing project plans, as well as new areas, would be a welcome step in the right direction," said Nalin Jain, South Asian business leader for GE's transportation unit.

GE, which has operated in India since 1902 and has nearly 15,000 employees there, said it has submitted a formal proposal to manufacture locomotives in India and was also trying to sell its train signalling and speed control products for various subway projects around the nation.

CORRECTED-India to seek foreign investment in giant, creaking rail network | Reuters
 

AVERAGE INDIAN

EXORCIST
Senior Member
Joined
Sep 22, 2012
Messages
3,326
Likes
5,408
Country flag
On Track: FDI in Railways

India will soon invite foreign businesses to help expand its once-mighty but now outdated railways, government sources said, in a move that would mark the opening up of one of the country's last great state-controlled industries.

Last year in end October, the Railways had set the ball rolling for privatising its passenger segment on its existing infrastructure with the launch of the High Speed Rail Corporation (HSRC).

Indian Railways is in fact set to undergo major transformation in the next five years, from the current move of privatising a section of its passenger traffic to the launch of High Speed Rail Corporation by Minister Mallikarjun Kharge. Incidentally the move to privatise comes at a time when some in countries like UK are clamouring for return to nationalisation.

The Railways identified seven routes — all commercially viable — on which the mini high speed trains with a speed of 160 km per hour to 200 km per hour would be operated under the PPP mode.

Some of the routes identified are Ahmedabad-Mumbai, Amritsar-Ludhiana-Chandigarh-Delhi, Agra-Lucknow-Varanasi-Patna, Chennai-Thiruvananthapuram and Bangalore-Chennai. The first project to be implemented under the scheme will be the Mumbai-Ahmedabad route.

Foreign investors will be allowed to fully own new services in suburban areas, high speed tracks, and connections to ports, mines and power installations, said two senior officials involved in the deliberations.

Existing passenger and freight network operations will not be open to foreign investors under the initiative, which seeks to ease bottlenecks that slow travel on the world's fourth-largest rail system.

"The plan is to allow 100 per cent foreign direct investment in suburban corridors, high-speed train systems, freight line projects implemented through public-private partnership," said an official at the Department of Industrial Policy & Promotion.

The government officials said the move could attract up to $10 billion of foreign investment over the next five years.

Previous targets to attract private investment to build India's infrastructure have been missed by a wide margin, but there were positive initial responses from potential investors such as General Electric Co and Bombardier.

Falling Behind
Established under British colonial rule, India's vast train network has been overtaken by China's rapid rail expansion over the past two decades.

Indian train travel is very cheap, and transports some 25 million passengers daily. But years of underinvestment mean the service is slow and plagued by frequent accidents, most recently a fire that killed nine people this week.

Freight charges are pegged far higher to subsidise the passenger services, driving much cargo transport onto clogged roads.

Slow Train
In the 66 years since independence, India has added 13,000 km (8,077 miles) of new railway lines bringing the total size to about 64,000 km (39,767 miles).

Only 1,750 km (1,087 miles) of new lines were added by India from 2006 to 2011, compared with 14,000 km (8,699 miles) by China, according to a report by the Ernst & Young.

Consequently, road transport as a share of freight traffic has gone up to about 60 per cent in India compared with about 44 per cent in the United States and 22 percent in China, government and industry data shows.

The reform, which does not need parliamentary approval, has been agreed by the railways, industry and finance ministries and has been submitted for consideration by the cabinet, which could sign off on it as soon as next week, said one official. Parts of the cabinet note were seen by Reuters.

The plan is one of a series of moves the ruling Congress party hopes will help spur India's economy out of a deep slump ahead of a general election due by May in which it is expected to struggle to hold off the challenge of the opposition BJP.

Railway ministry officials expect interest from Chinese firms such as CSR Corp Ltd <601766.SS>, Germany's Siemens, as well as Japanese manufacturers that already work in India as contractors and suppliers to the railways.

The proposal was greeted enthusiastically by Canada's Bombardier, which in 2008 set up a 33 million euros factory in Gujarat state to build trains for Delhi Metro and plans exports to other Asian markets.

"Bombardier is bullish about the demand and the future prospects of Indian rail transportation industry," said Harsh Dhingra, chief country representative, Bombardier Transportation.

"Multinational companies from North America, Europe, the U.S. and Japan have shown a long-term commitment to set up a base and invest in India to cater to the future demand in the sector."

India's rail wagon manufacturers were also enthused by the plans and expect to set up joint ventures with foreign players.

"Obviously we will be interested in a joint venture. We are positioning ourselves for that. We expect it will bring very good business opportunity for us as well as for the country," said Sandeep Fuller, the CEO of Texmaco Rail & Engineering Ltd, a Kolkata-based wagon manufacturer.

Liberalisation Push
India has opened industries including retail, civil aviation, pharmaceuticals, telecommunications and defence to foreign investors in recent years, with the goal of improving the nation's finances and driving economic growth.

The liberalisation has had mixed results, with supermarkets especially complaining that red tape, politics and corruption make it difficult to do business in India.

FDI inflows during the April-October period were down 15 per cent from a year earlier at $12.6 billion, despite the opening of new sectors.

The involvement of foreign firms in the main rail network is currently restricted to exporting rolling stock, signalling systems and engines to Indian Railways, a state-run behemoth that employs around 1.4 million people.

Trade unions and many political parties oppose allowing foreign investment in railways, and Chinese participation in particular could raise suspicion in security circles. India, which fought a brief war with China in 1962, is cautious about its growing role in the Indian economy.

In the past, the government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has backed off liberalisation policies in the face of public and political opposition.

According to local media reports, in October, India rejected bids from two Chinese companies -- CSR Corp and China CNR Corp -- to set up locomotive plants under the public-private partnership model.

Current policy only allows direct foreign investment in urban metro projects.

Any investors in building track will still have to overcome the administrative hurdles such as project approvals and land disputes that meant investment by private Indian companies in railways has not met government goals.

In the five-year period to April 2012, the railways only saw 4 per cent of $16 billion investment targeted through public-private partnerships.

General Electric Co, the world's largest maker of diesel locomotives, said it would prefer a public-private partnership to make locomotives with Indian Railways for new projects, but despite a lot of discussion, "progress has been very slow".

The US company said it would welcome any steps to open India's railways to foreign investment.

"Any fresh impetus to expedite private sector participation on existing project plans, as well as new areas, would be a welcome step in the right direction," said Nalin Jain, South Asian business leader for GE's transportation unit.

GE, which has operated in India since 1902 and has nearly 15,000 employees there, said it has submitted a formal proposal to manufacture locomotives in India and was also trying to sell its train signalling and speed control products for various subway projects around the nation. - See more at: On Track: FDI in Railways
 

nirranj

Regular Member
Joined
Jun 21, 2013
Messages
939
Likes
827
Country flag
It will be better to hand over the Chennai Suburban to the Tamil Nadu govt. They are already running a succesful public transport system, that is cheap and affprdable yet profitable. Bringing in foreign investment and technology is not the answer. The govt with its unnecessary voter appeasing schemes is denying money for critical infrastructure developments. These Aam Aadmi stunts are actually deteriorating the nations infrastructure and is indirectly selling out the nation to foreign investments.
 

nirranj

Regular Member
Joined
Jun 21, 2013
Messages
939
Likes
827
Country flag
Let the Railways have a RnD like the DRDO. Infact we should have a RnD establishment for the Infrastructure development in India. There is nothing a GE or any foreign company can do that our ICF's and Loco plants can do. Only thing that we miss is clear leadership coupled with proper financing of the projects. It is utter waste and will lead to drain of our wealth if we allow the Foreign players.

Govt should make the railway network into a complete electrical driven. Build nuclear power plants, Solar farms in Railway properties and cover the tracks with Solar roofs wherever possible feed output to the Railway grid. This will need heavy capital. But let the Govt stop its aam admi nuisance and invest in railways. reduce the fossil fuel consuption by the railways, list the railways in stock markets and let people of India to invest in the Railways. Railways shares will be the golden goose for the public. Whenever the railways wants money for its expansion or upgradation let it go to the Indian public.

FDI is not the solution. Railways should not be sold out for the Governments irresponsible financial measures.
 
Last edited:

Global Defence

New threads

Articles

Top