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At Metro-II puja, Centre offers 50% funding for stuck corridor III

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Indian Express 19.08.2009

At Metro-II puja, Centre offers 50% funding for stuck corridor III

The Centre is ready to bear 50 per cent of the cost of the Colaba-Bandra Metro Corridor project under a joint venture model, according to Union Minister for Urban Development S Jaipal Reddy.

He was speaking on Tuesday at the foundation-stone laying ceremony of the 32-km Charkop-Bandra-Mankhurd Corridor.

President Pratibha Patil performed the bhoomi puja for the 27-station project, taken up by Reliance Infrastructure Ltd, which will provide a vital link between Navi Mumbai and the Western suburbs and connect Charkop in the north to Bandra and Mankhurd in the east.

She said, “Metro and Monorail are like capillaries and veins. The more they grow, more the body functions. With Metro and Monorail coming, the city will grow and progress.”

On taking forward the underground Colaba-Bandra corridor stuck in the slow lane because of its high estimated cost of Rs 12,000 crore, Reddy said the Public Private Partnership (PPP) model may not be suitable because of the huge cost.

He suggested an equity between the Centre and the state, on the lines of the Delhi Metro model, which, in fact, had been considered and shelved earlier by the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA), the nodal agency for the project.

Reddy said, “The estimated cost of Line III (Colaba-Bandra corridor) is over Rs 10,000 crore and therefore may not be suitable for the PPP model. The Centre is prepared to invest 50 per cent equity for a JV, in addition to soft loans from the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and subordinate debt.”

However, MMRDA is not in a rush to take Reddy’s offer.

“We want to start work on Corridor III at the earliest. We’re awaiting a report on commercial exploitation of underground stations. Commercial exploitation would lower the viability gap funding (VGF) substantially and then, we’ll can take a call on the model to be adopted. Once VGF comes down, we still have the PPP option open,” said Ratnakar Gaikwad, Metropolitan Commissioner. The report is expected in two months.

Earlier, MMRDA had planned to adopt the Delhi Metro model as the VGF of nearly Rs 9,000 crore had made the PPP model unviable. After constituting a Mumbai Metro Rail Corporation, the authority subsequently decided to shelve the plan.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 August 2009 11:51
 

Speed up bus rapid transit system project: Reddy to state govt

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Indian Express 19.08.2009

Speed up bus rapid transit system project: Reddy to state govt

Union Urban Development Minister Jaipal Reddy has asked the state government to expedite the bus rapid transit system (BRTS) project.

“The state government should give special attention to the BRTS. The roads have been invaded by owners of private buildings and they are becoming increasingly insensitive to the need of pedestrians,” he said. “BRTS is part of National Urban Transport Policy and the work should begin soon. This will help and encourage public transport.”

Pune is the only city in the state to have implemented BRTS. Consulting Engineering Services (CES) had done a feasibility report on the project, but the Mumbai Metropolitan Regional Development Authority (MMRDA) is yet to take a decision on it.

Senior MMRDA officials said the project could turn out to be a costly affair.

However, there was no assurance from the government in this regard. Metropolitan commissioner Ratnakar Gaikwad said, “We would be working on it and it would not be far different from those in Delhi and Pune.”

Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 August 2009 11:47
 

Centre open to taking stake in Mumbai Metro

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The Business Line 19.08.2009

Centre open to taking stake in Mumbai Metro

 

President lays foundation for 2nd phase of the project.

 

 

 

 

 

 

— Paul Noronha

The President, Ms Pratibha Patil, with the Union Minister of State for Communication, Information and Technology, Mr Jaipal Reddy, the Maharashtra Chief Minister, Mr Ashok Chavan, the Reliance Infrastructure Chairman, Mr Anil Ambani, and the Union Minister of State for Communication, Information and Technology, Mr Gurudas Kamat, at the Bhoomipuja of the Charkop-Bandra-Mankhurd Metro Rail Project held in Mumbai on Tuesday.

 

Our Bureau

Mumbai, Aug 18 The Centre is willing to take a 50 per cent stake in the third phase of the 64-km Mumbai Metro rail corridor.

Cost may exceed

 

 

The Minister for Urban Development, Mr Jaipal Reddy, said at a function here on Tuesday that with the cost of this phase tipped to exceed Rs 10,000 crore, the present financing models of public-private partnership and joint ventures may not work.

As the viability gap funding for such a big project would not be easy, the Centre would be willing to participate in its equity.

It is also keen to facilitate a soft loan through Japan Bank for International Cooperation, he said.

Critical link

 

 

The President, Ms Pratibha Patil, laid the foundation stone for the Rs 8,250-crore second phase of the Metro from Charkop to Mankhurd via Bandra, which would be a critical link between Navi Mumbai and the western suburbs.

The 32-km elevated corridor will have 27 stations en route.

BOT basis

 

 

The Mumbai Metropolitan Regional Development Authority will implement the project on a build, operate and transfer basis with Reliance Infrastructure of the Anil Ambani Group and SNC Lavin of Canada. It is expected to be commissioned by 2014 and will have a concession period of 35 years. The fare structure is Rs 8 for three kilometres, going up by Rs 2 for every five kilometres. By 2021, about 18.77 lakh passengers are expected to use the Metro.

Of the total viability gap funding of Rs 2,298 crore, the Centre has already contributed Rs 1,532 crore. Mr Reddy said that it had, to date, provided over Rs 4,500 crore through various forms of funding for the Metro project.

The Centre is also in the process of sanctioning infrastructure projects of over Rs 13,090 crore for Mumbai, he added.

Ms Patil said the Metro and Monorail projects were safe modes of transport which would save on travel time and reduce pollution.

“For a project such as the Mumbai Metro, planning, execution and management need to be handled properly,” she added.

viability gap funding

 

 

The Government of India and the MMRDA will provide Rs 1,532 crore and Rs 766 crore respectively, as viability gap funding for the project.

MMRDA plans to develop 146.5 km of metro network in three phases. In the first phase, it plans to build the metro line between Versova-Andheri-Ghatkopar, Charkop-Bandra-Mankurd in second phase while Colaba-Bandra line will be built in the third phase.

Work on the 11km Versova-Andheri-Ghatkopar is already going on and is likely to be completed by September 2010.

 


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