Sunday, September 1, 2013

Reuters: Regulatory News: RPT-Speedier clearances no magic wand for India's infrastructure logjam

Reuters: Regulatory News
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RPT-Speedier clearances no magic wand for India's infrastructure logjam
Sep 2nd 2013, 04:06

Mon Sep 2, 2013 12:06am EDT

  By Matthias Williams and Manoj Kumar      NEW DELHI, Sept 2 (Reuters) - Scrambling for remedies as  investors' faith in India sagged, the government said last week  it fast-tracked approval for a slew of infrastructure projects  worth $28 billion: but the stroke of a pen in New Delhi will not  be enough.        The government hopes that speeding up the launch of hundreds  of new power plants, highways and oil exploration blocks will  breathe new life into an economy that has fallen off its perch  as an emerging market high-flier.       Growth in the latest quarter was the slowest since during  the global financial crisis, and the rupee   has tumbled ever deeper against the U.S. dollar.  Failing to get the projects off the ground would be another  blow.      However, there is no evidence to suggest that these projects  will somehow sidestep the obstacles that have hobbled  construction for years - from red tape and land acquisition  battles to banks' unwillingness to lend to a risk-prone sector.      Only a quarter of Indian infrastructure projects are   completed on time, according to a 2012 report by Ernst & Young  consultants.      Financing will be one of the biggest challenges right now.  The infrastructure sector is one of the biggest contributors to  banks' growing bad loans, with outstanding debt of about $120  billion, and tight liquidity conditions mean debt-laden  companies will find it tough to raise fresh funds.      "These new measures are much too wonderful to be true," said  Eric Mookherjee, a Paris-based fund manager at Shanti India,  which manages Indian stocks worth more than $300 million,  including IRB Infrastructure Developers Ltd.      "Expediting approvals for the projects that were stalled for  years is not going to start the machines from tomorrow morning,"  he said. "The issue with infrastructure in India is financing,  and if liquidity is going to be sucked out of the market to  support the rupee it will be very hard for the banks to fund  these projects."                        HOOPS AND HURDLES      Anil Swarup, a senior official in the prime minister's  office who heads a group that monitors and helps steer projects  already cleared, said no companies had complained to his group  of a lack of progress. However, he accepted that a fast-tracked  project still faced many hurdles, including wrangles over land  acquisition and law-and-order problems at a state level.      "We cannot expect an overnight transformation," he said. "In  any project, there would be a number of issues and ... until  those are resolved, the project does not go on stream."      One beneficiary of last week's project clearances by a  cabinet panel was Essar Group, a diversified conglomerate with  interests in power, oil and steel. After a 5-year wait, Essar  was finally promised environmental approval to develop two coal  blocks that will feed a power plant in the state of Jharkhand.      The reaction of one company official, though, was lukewarm.  The approval may have come through, but a timeline for when the  company can actually start mining was still uncertain.      "Funding is linked to the environment clearance to the coal  blocks, and banks will release funds once we have all the  clearances. The announcement is a positive development, but we  have got nothing in our hands, so we will progress on this once  everything has been approved," said the official.            SHIVERING RUPEE      India's track record for infrastructure development is  miserable compared with China and most emerging market  economies, and its failure on this score has sapped growth.       The government has targeted spending of $1 trillion on new  projects over the five years to 2017, but it has fallen short of  previous funding and implementation goals, and much of the  country is still plagued by power blackouts and bumpy roads.      A land acquisition bill, which is aimed at speeding up  infrastructure and industrial projects by giving farmers better  compensation for selling their land, was passed in the lower  house of parliament on Thursday.      It takes about 295 days to acquire or lease public land in  India, more than twice the global average, Standard Chartered  wrote in a research note on Friday that cited World Bank data.  Getting private land takes 99 days, versus a global average of  61 days.       Despite New Delhi's best efforts to get infrastructure  moving, the problem appears to be getting worse. The percentage  of total projects delayed on account of land acquisition-related  issues more than trebled to 11.3 percent as of March 2013 from  six years ago, the note said.      "How can you run through these projects when land must be  acquired before financial closure?" said a senior official at  the Planning Commission, a powerful government advisory body  that helps steer infrastructure policy, on the clearances. "You  can't talk things up. Look at the rupee, it's shivering."      The Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry  was scathing about the bill, which will replace colonial-era  legislation, saying that not only will land cost more, the  process of acquiring it will be stretched by 4-5 years.            STOPPING THE ROT      The government's Cabinet Committee on Investment (CCI), set  up by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in January, was charged with  stopping the rot by solving inter-departmental disputes and  speeding up clearances, especially environment and fuel permits.      Among its successes, the committee ended a 14-year saga  involving NTPC Ltd, the country's largest power  producer, and Coal India Ltd, the world's biggest coal  miner, over the construction of a 1,980 MW power project.      NTPC was initially granted permission to build the plant in  Jharkhand, but then Coal India claimed the site after coal  reserves were discovered underneath it. After years of dispute  and the establishment of a committee headed by a top civil  servant to look into the case, the CCI ruled in favour of NTPC.      However, NTPC still had more hoops to jump through before it  could finally issue equipment tenders. It had to move the  construction site by about 300 metres, and because environmental  clearances had expired they had to be obtained again.      Such hurdles are typical in India, where the average project  needs 56 separate permissions that can take two years to obtain.      Vinayak Chatterjee, head of the Feedback Infra consultancy,  said the clearances were a positive step, but resistance from  ministries keen to guard their veto rights has watered down the  CCI's powers.      "The CCI was originally conceived as a National Investment  Board ... and that was supposed to be a far more powerful body  which would have been empowered to give clearances," he said.  "The CCI does not have statutory powers to override line  ministries. So effectively it has become a pressure and  coordinating body."      "I think the line ministries felt uncomfortable about their  powers being taken away, as usual," he said, referring to those  ministries in the line of approvals needed for such projects.      For example, the committee can take a decision to nudge Coal  India to provide fuel for a power project, but it cannot force  the miner to do so, or stipulate a timeline for the supplies, an  official at a major infrastructure group said.      "While the CCI has cleared the projects, there is no clear  uptick in activity related to such projects," Barclays said in a  June research note. "We believe that activity/investment related  to such projects could remain subdued, given the weak momentum  and sentiment in the economy - that is, the CCI clearance, per  se, is not the 'game changer' the government sees it as being."  
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