Bankers Want Green NOD Before Project Bids
The Indian Banks' Association to tell finance ministry how to revive 85 large projects worth Rs 3.5 lakh crore stuck in sectors such as road, power and steel
Banks will ask the finance ministry to ensure environment clearances are provided before projects are put up for bidding, considering a chunk of big-ticket projects are stalled for want of this vital permit.
The Indian Banks' Association (IBA) will in the next fortnight make this as well as several other recommendations impacting six stressed sectors - roads, power, steel, sugar, EPC (engineering, procurement and construction) and electricity distribution companies - to the finance ministry to speed infrastructure development.
The report is in response to a meeting Hasmukh Adhia, financial services secretary, and R N Choubey, special secretary, power, held with bankers in April to discuss how to revive 85 large projects worth Rs 3.5 lakh crore.
The suggestions are meant as advice and it is left to the government to act upon them. The management committee of IBA authored the report with inputs from all banks, public, private and foreign.
The report suggests stalled road projects be allowed partial tolling to recover some money and the concession period be extended for projects stuck over land acquisition. If a project is cancelled halfway by a state government, a lump-sum termination payment should be made.
The report recommends effective power purchase agreements, where producers can fully pass on costs to buyers. Obstacles to power projects should have time-bound resolution, beyond which the power company should be compensated.
The Indian Banks' Association (IBA) will in the next fortnight make this as well as several other recommendations impacting six stressed sectors - roads, power, steel, sugar, EPC (engineering, procurement and construction) and electricity distribution companies - to the finance ministry to speed infrastructure development.
The report is in response to a meeting Hasmukh Adhia, financial services secretary, and R N Choubey, special secretary, power, held with bankers in April to discuss how to revive 85 large projects worth Rs 3.5 lakh crore.
The suggestions are meant as advice and it is left to the government to act upon them. The management committee of IBA authored the report with inputs from all banks, public, private and foreign.
The report suggests stalled road projects be allowed partial tolling to recover some money and the concession period be extended for projects stuck over land acquisition. If a project is cancelled halfway by a state government, a lump-sum termination payment should be made.
The report recommends effective power purchase agreements, where producers can fully pass on costs to buyers. Obstacles to power projects should have time-bound resolution, beyond which the power company should be compensated.
The report suggests stringent measures, including higher tariffs, against dumping of steel by countries. Banks have also sought lower sugarcane price guarantees by state governments.
They also feel the power ministry's proposals on the Ujwal Discom Assurance Yojana are in the right direction. In addition, they are seeking immediate reductions in transmission losses, bifurcation of the rural feed and modernisation of the grid.
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