The
World Bank said on Wednesday it had cleared a $650 million loan for a
huge Indian freight rail corridor that will span 1,840 kms (1,140 miles)
across the northern heartland of the country.
Construction of
the Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor will help speed up the carrying
of goods between Ludhiana in the west of India and Kolkata in the east,
and is part of a series of new freight lines the World Bank says India
needs to ease congestion on its network.
"The Indian Railways
urgently needs to add freight routes to meet the growing freight traffic
in India, which is projected to increase more than 7 percent annually,"
Ben L. J. Eijbergen, the Task Team Leader for the project, said in a
statement.
The loan is the third from the World Bank to help
fund the freight corridor. Last year the bank approved a $1.1 billion
outlay and in 2011 $975 million.
India's railways, built mostly
by the British before independence in 1947, are among the most
extensive in the world but have struggled to expand to keep up with
demand.
This has hit freight carriers hard as they are forced to carry their
goods by road, which is far more inefficient and expensive, to make room
for passenger trains on the congested lines. The railway's share of
freight has fallen from 90 percent of cargo in 1950 to about one-third
today.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, banking on
big investment in infrastructure to boost the economy, approved a $137
billion investment plan for the railways in February.
Successive governments have struggled to attract the funds necessary to
upgrade roads, rail and ports across India, crimping economic growth.
In this 3rd phase loan used to build 401km Ludhiana-Khurja section in UP,Haryana and Punjab which is part of the 1840km EDFC between Ludhiana to Kolkata.Addition of this moving freight from road to rail will reduce the carbon footprint of freight by 2.25 times.So, it will be the financial improvement for the Railway sector.
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