R-Infra gets Rs 1,000-cr contract from Gujarat govt

Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group flagship company Reliance Infrastructure Ltd (R-Infra) has won a Rs 1,000-crore (Rs 10-billion) road project from the Gujarat government, within a week after winning the Rs 1,725-crore (Rs 17.25 billion) Pune-Satara Road project from the National Highway Authority of India .

R-Infra quoted Rs 42-crore (Rs 420-million) premium over the bids of rival companies such as GVK Power and Infrastructure Limited, GMR Infrastructure , B Sennaih and C&C, JMC Srei and Sadhbhav, sources told Business Standard.

The project is to execute a 71 kilometre four-six lane corridor connecting the ports of Mundra and Kandla in Gujarat. The project has to be completed by December 2012 on a design, build, finance, operate and transfer (toll) basis with a concession period of 25 years.

The bidding process for this project started in February and 20 bidders were qualified in the initial screening stage. The shortlisted six companies submitted their final bids on December 3. The bids were opened on Monday, said sources. An R-Infra spokesperson declined to comment.

The company plans to increase its investments in road projects to over Rs 20,000 crore (Rs 200 billion) by 2012. R-Infra is also looking for opportunities in ultra mega road projects across India, Lalit Jalan, chief executive of R-Infra, had told Business Standard in a recent interview.

A few days ago, R-Infra had won the Rs 1,750-crore (Rs 17.5-billion) Pune-Satara six laning project with a length of 140 kilometers, a corridor connecting Mumbai and Pune to southern parts of India, including Bangalore and Chennai.

R-Infra is now executing nine road projects with a total outlay of Rs 7,500 crore (Rs 75 billion) totaling more than 700 kilometers. Two months ago, the company had operationalised its two toll road projects worth Rs 760 crore (Rs 7.6 billion) in Tamil Nadu.

The rest of the road projects are at various stages of development. All road projects of the company are executed by Reliance Infraventures, a 100 per cent subsidiary of R-Infra.
 
The cost of land

That the Anil Ambani-owned Reliance Energy Limited (REL) will be affected by the Allahabad High Court's decision on the land acquired by it for its 7,500 Mw Dadri power plant is obvious since the entire process of inviting objections to the acquisition has to be initiated from scratch.

So, if the 5,000-odd farmers who have sold their land to REL and signed acceptance agreements (ikraarnaama) are able to return the money paid to them by the company, they can list out their objections. While it is unlikely that all of them will do so, more so since REL has already paid out around Rs 150-160 crore (Rs 1.50-1.60 billion) to them, even a handful of farmers doing this will be enough to delay the project.

Meanwhile, the Anil Ambani group has been at pains to point out that while it is confident the Dadri land issue will be sorted out, it has no bearing on the case it is fighting in the Supreme Court against the Mukesh Ambani-owned Reliance Industries Limited (RIL).

The family MoU, according to the Anil Ambani group, says RIL has to supply gas to Dadri and other projects of the group -- whether the MoU that was signed by Mukesh Ambani [ Images ] is binding on RIL, of course, is one of the subjects under litigation in the court.

Lack of a transparent and clear policy on land acquisition can only hurt industrial development and employment generation. The Allahabad High Court, therefore, has implications that go beyond Reliance Energy since land acquisition has become a major problem for all large industrial projects in the country.

It has been Business Standard's view that inviting of objections and dealing with them is an important process that cannot be done away with -- this is what the Uttar Pradesh government did away with when it acquired the land under emergency provisions, though at prices which Reliance Energy says were double the prevailing rate.

But what is worrying is the argument that since the land was being acquired for a company, it could not be seen as being done for a public purpose -- "public purpose" was the argument used by the UP government for using the emergency provision.

Whether the land is acquired for industry or for a government project is immaterial, what matters is that land-losers are heard -- and if the majority don't want to be ousted, that needs to be respected -- and their demands for proper compensation/jobs met. There is also the issue of how long after the event court cases can be entertained -- in this case, the land was acquired three years before the court cases began.

In addition, there is the issue that comes up each time there is a case filed against a corporate entity -- that of whether the case has been filed at the behest of a business or other rival.

There is no easy answer to this question, but the courts need to devise a way to ensure the corporate veil, if any, is lifted in all such cases and transaction costs in land acquisition don't escalate.
 
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