Friday 4 November 2011

WB signs 975 mn USD loan agreement for Railway's eastern DFC

2011.

WB signs 975 mn USD loan agreement for Railway's eastern DFC

Giving a boost to Railway's ambitious Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC) project, the World Bank on Thursday signed a 975 million USD loan agreement with the government for execution of the plan in the eastern corridor.

The financing for the project will cover 1,130 km of the 1839 km corridor which will connect Ludhiana in Punjab to Dankuni in West Bengal.
The funds will be provided in three phases and the agreement signed today will be for the first phase between Khurja and Kanpur covering 343 km, said railway sources.
The DFC proposes to help faster and more efficient movement of raw materials and finished goods between the Northern and Eastern parts of India.
The corridor will also allow Indian Railways to free up capacity from the existing train corridor and better-serve the large passenger market in this densely-populated region.
Railways have already tied up with Japanese government to fund its Western corridor linking Tughlakabad to Mumbai.
The project will help increase the capacity of these freight-only lines by raising the axle-load limit from 22.9 to 25 tons and enable speeds of up to 100 km/hr.
The agreements were signed by joint secretary of the department of Economic Affairs Venu Rajamony on behalf of the Government of India, DFC Corporation Limited Project Director Anshuman Sharma and World Bank Country Director Roberto Zagha.
The Eastern Corridor will ease congestion choking the railway system and reduce travel-time for passenger trains on the arterial Ludhiana-Delhi-Mughal Sarai railway route once the frieght corridor opens up.
The Corridor will add additional rail transport capacity, improve service quality and create higher freight capacity.
The loan, from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) under World Bank, has a maturity period of 22 years including a 7-year grace period, an official statement said.
The Western and the Eastern corridors promise to accelerate the pace of economic growth and help railways get a quantum leap in increasing its transportation capacity by building high-capacity, high-speed dedicated freight corridors along the golden quadrilateral the four rail routes that connect Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata.
Currently, these routes account for just 16 per cent of the railway network, but carry more than 50 per cent of the total freight.
DFC aims at shifting drastically road freight to railways thereby reducing the carbon footprint and green house gas.
Unlike the existing rail network, which runs on a combination of diesel and electrical locomotives, the proposed DFC corridor will operate entirely through electric locomotives, thereby further reducing GHG emissions.
Road freight now accounts for about 65 per cent of the freight market and 90 per cent of the passenger market in the country.
A carbon footprint analysis conducted by DFC corporation for the Eastern DFC project shows the corridor is expected to cause 2.25 times less carbon emissions, the statement said. (ST-27/10)

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