PPP's of Indian Railways - A Report

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Commuter RailPublic Transport

 Attached is a report on PPP projects of Indian Railways over the years. Thanks to CiSTUP for sharing this with/for Praja with permission from G Raghuram. Please do not redistribute without permission from authors as it may infringe copyrights. It makes a very interesting reading

Let me know what you think, after reading?

PPPs of IR

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Comments

IDS, thanks!

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IDS,

Thanks for sharing this. Will get back after reading thru it.

 

New policy

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 Railways new policy on PPP can be read here:

http://www.indianrailways.gov.in/indianrailways/directorate/planning/downloads/R3i_circular_new.pdf

 

Not relevant to Commuter Rail

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Thammu, thanks for sharing. But right on the first page of the new policy, you read this:

The primary objective of this policy is to retain and increase rail share in freight traffic.

Further, focus seems to be new lines only.

Only those new line proposals which are 20 kms or more in length (excluding the length of siding which may take off from this line) shall be eligible under this policy

For CRS, the core idea is to reuse existing lines. Not sure if augmenting them (extra tracks) will be covered.

Regardless, the section describing SPV model is an interesting read, for this is how a future circular allowing commuter rail SPVs in large cities (that's what we want) could look:

An SPV shall be formed between railways and the applicant and railways share in equity will generally be 26%.

Notice operate and maintain below:

SPV shall be granted a concession to construct, operate and maintain the line and in consideration there of, it shall be granted a share in the revenue generated on the project line.

But then it says this to confuse (O&M = operate & maintain) us:

6.5 O&M shall be undertaken for the SPV by the railways for which SPV shall reimburse the costs.

Anyway. Lets wait. We are told things ar emoving favorably at Rail bhavan for commuter rail.

Traffic density on existing lines

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 Some of the lines touching B'lore are supposed to be having the highest traffic density in Indian Railway. Tumkur line for instance. So utilising the existing tracks for  CRS looks doubtful. Hyderabad tried the same approach, but failed. Dedicated corridor is a must, I believe.

Some of the lines touching

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Some of the lines touching B'lore are supposed to be having the highest traffic density in Indian Railway. Tumkur line for instance.

What are the number of trains per hour on the Tumkur line?

Hyderabad tried the same approach, but failed.

Which line in hyderabad was tried and failed? 

Hyderabad Metro

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 Hyderabad EMU's are running on the existing line between Hyderabad - Falaknuma - Hi Tech city after electrification. But due to existing traffic, the frequency of the service is not assured. Thereby a commuter is not able to just walk in and catch a local. Thus the traffic projected in the original plan could never be achieved. Bus connectivity (last mile) is also one of the problem here. The traffic has definitely picked up and more rakes are ordered but it is no where near projection.

Hyderabad EMU's are running

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Hyderabad EMU's are running on the existing line between Hyderabad - Falaknuma - Hi Tech city after electrification.

If running more than ONE dedicated commuter EMU on existing tracks are considered failure I am all for it. We have requested for skeletal service (means more than one) during peak hours till we get dedicated tracks.

Do you have a numbers to compare this with the Tumkur line? As far as I know atleast 80 dedicated trips are being done on the existing tracks itself in Hyderabad.

Thus the traffic projected in the original plan could never be achieved.

To substantiate this statement, what is the traffic projected in the original plan and what is the current ridership in Hyderabad?

Avoiding passenger traffic

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The primary objective of this policy is to retain and increase rail share in freight traffic

I feel like Railway is trying to avoid passenger traffic and concentrate on freight traffic.