Bharatmala
Bharatmala Pariyojana is a centrally-sponsored and funded Road and Highways project of the Government of India. The total investment for committed new highways is estimated at, making it the single largest outlay for a government road construction scheme. The project will build highways from Gujarat, Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana and then cover the entire string of Himalayan states - Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand - and then portions of borders of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar alongside Terai, and move to West Bengal, Sikkim, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, and right up to the Indo-Myanmar border in Manipur and Mizoram. Special emphasis will be given on providing connectivity to far-flung border and rural areas including the tribal and backward areas. Bharatmala Project will interconnect 550 District Headquarters through a minimum 4-lane highway by raising the number of corridors to 50 and move 80% freight traffic to National Highways by interconnecting 24 logistics parks, 66 inter-corridors of total, 116 feeder routes of total and 7 north east Multi-Modal waterway ports.
The ambitious umbrella programme will subsume all existing Highway Projects including the flagship National Highways Development Project, launched by the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government in 1998.
It is both enabler and beneficiary of other key Government of India schemes, such as Sagarmala, Dedicated Freight Corridors, Industrial corridors, UDAN-RCS, BharatNet, Digital India and Make in India.
Scope
Context
's 54,82,000 km road network is second largest in the world, of which only 2% are national highways carrying 40% road traffic. Bharatmala phase-I will raise the NH connection to a total of 80% or 550 districts out of total 716 districts from the current 42% or 300 districts connected to NH. Mapping of Shortest Route for 12,000 routes carrying 90% of the India's freight, commodity-wise survey of freight movement across 600 districts, automated traffic surveys over 1,500+ pointsacross the country, and satellite mapping of corridors to identify upgradation requirements for Bharatmala.
NHIDCL
National Highways and Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited was created in 2014 as a fully owned company of the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways by the Government of India to expedite construction of National Highway projects with specific focus on Northeast India.Central Road Fund (CRF)
Central Road Fund was created as a non-lapsable fund under the "Central Road Fund Act 2000", by imposing a cess on petrol and diesel, to build and upgrade National Highways, State roads, rural roads, railway under/over bridges etc, and national waterways.Impact
Bharatmala will significantly boost highway infrastructure:- Raise 6 NC corridors to 50 corridors
- Raise 40% freight to 80% freight on National Highways
- Raise 300 districts to 550 districts connected by minimum 4-lane highways.
Components
National Highways Development Project (NHDP)
project covers, including completed, under construction and left for award. The uncompleted projects under NHDP will also be subsumed in Bharatmala.National Corridors (NC)
National Corridors of India are 6 high volume corridors, including 4 in Golden Quadrilateral and 2 in North–South and East–West Corridors. Including Mumbai - Kolkata Highway, known as East Coast - West Coast Corridor, that carry 35% of India's freight. Lane expansion to 6 to 8 laning, ring roads, bypasses and elevated corridors will be built in Bharatmala to decongest the National Corridors. Logistics Parks will be set up along the NC. Busiest stretches of National Corridors will be converted to the expressways. inter-corridor and feeder routes will be built. Additionally, of border roads and international highways will be built to connect 6 National Corridors to international trade routes.National Corridors Efficiency Program (NCEP)
National Corridors Efficiency Program entails phase-I decongestion of 185 choke points by 34 6-8 laning, 45 bypasses and 28 ring roads of 6 NC.New ring roads in Bharatmala include:
- Agra
- Amaravati
- Belgaum
- Bengaluru
- Bhubaneswar
- Chitradurga
- Delhi
- Dhanbad
- Dhule
- Gurugram
- Indore
- Jaipur
- Kota
- Lucknow
- Madurai
- Nagpur
- Noida
- Patna
- Pune
- Raipur
- Ranchi
- Sambalpur
- Shivpuri
- Srinagar
- Surat
- Udaipur
- Varanasi
- Vijayawada
Economic Corridors
List of 44 economic corridors :
- EC-1: Mumbai-Kolkata
- EC-2: Mumbai-Kanyakumari
- EC-3: Amritsar-Jamnagar
- EC-4: Kandla-Sagar
- EC-5: Agra-Mumbai
- EC-6: Pune-Vijayawada
- EC-7: Raipur-Dhanbad
- EC-8: Ludhiana-Ajmer
- EC-9: Surat-Nagpur
- EC-10: Hyderabad-Panaji
- EC-11: Jaipur-Indore
- EC-12: Solapur-Nagpur
- EC-13: Sagar-Varanasi
- EC-14: Kharagpur-Siliguri
- EC-15: Raipur-Vishakapatnam
- EC-16: Delhi-Lucknow
- EC-17: Chennai-Kurnool
- EC-18: Indore-Nagpur
- EC-19: Chennai-Madurai
- EC-20: Mangalore-Raichur
- EC-21: Tuticorin-Cochin
- EC-22: Solapur-Bellary-Gooty
- EC-23: Hyderabad-Aurangabad
- EC-24: Delhi-Kanpur
- EC-25: Tharad-Phalodi
- EC-26: Nagaur-Mandi Dabawli
- EC-27: Sagar-Lucknow
- EC-28: Sambalpur-Paradeep
- EC-29: Amreli-Vadodra
- EC-30: Godhra-Khargone
- EC-31: Sambalpur-Ranchi
- EC-32: Bengaluru-Malappuram
- EC-33: Raisen-Pathariya
- EC-34: Bengaluru-Mangalore
- EC-35: Chittaurgarh-Indore
- EC-36: Bilaspur-New Delhi
- EC-37: Solapur-Mahabubnagar
- EC-38: Bengaluru-Nellore
- EC-39: Ajmer-Udaipur
- EC-40: Sirsa-Delhi
- EC-41: Sirohi-Beawar
- EC-42: Jaipur-Agra
- EC-43: Pune-Aurangabad
- EC-44: North East Corridor
Logistics parks
- Bengaluru
- Hyderabad
- North Punjab
- * Jalandhar
- * Amritsar
- * Gurdaspur
- South Punjab
- * Ludhiana
- * Sangrur
- * Patiala
- NCR
- * Delhi
- * Faridabad
- * Narnaul
- * Ghaziabad
- North Gujarat
- * Ahmedabad
- * Vadodara
- South Gujarat
- * Surat
- * Bharuch
- Maharashtra
- * Mumbai
- * Mumbai suburbs
- * Jawaharlal Nehru Port
- * Mumbai Port Trust
- * Thane
- * Raigad
Northeast India connectivity
on the .
- Dhubri
- Silghat
- Biswanath Ghat
- Neamati
- Dibrugarh
- Sengajan
- Oriyamghat
International connectivity
- 24 Integrated check posts
- Transit through Bangladesh to improve Northeast India
- Integrating Bangladesh–Bhutan–Nepal-Myanmar–Thailand BIMSTEC corridors.
Finance
- Total budget for 5 years Bharatmala project from 2017-2022.
- * existing NH projects subsumed under Bharatmala, such as incomplete National Highways, SARDP-NE, Externally Aided Projects, and Left Wing Extremism roads.
- * phase-I to be completed during 2017-dec 2019:
- ** through market borrowings.
- ** through private investments.
- ** through the Central Road Fund and tolls:
- *** from CRF.
- *** from new toll monetisation of completed highways.
- *** from current toll fee from Toll-Permanent Bridge Fee Fund ).
- Fy2017-18:
- highways built at the rate of 27 km/day,
- through allocation in the national budget.
- Fy2018-19:
- * will be awarded.
- * will be completed.
- * total spend:
- ** through allocation in the national budget,
- ** through bonds,
- ** through toll monetisation of 30 completed highways.
Implementation phases: 2017-2022
Phase 1: 34,800 km by December 2022
The total length of highways will be constructed under phase-I by December 2022, including of new highways and another currently under-construction remaining incomplete under NHDP, compared to 19 years it took to upgrade almost same length of National Highways under NHDP.Road Type | Total Length | Phase-I Length | Notes |
Economic Corridors | 44 EC corridors exclude 6 NC. | ||
Inter-corridor & feeder Routes | 66 inter-corridors & 116 feeder routes. | ||
National Corridors Efficiency Program | 6-8 laning, bypasses and ring roads of 6 NC. | ||
Border & International connectivity roads | of border roads and to connect 6 national corridors to international trade routes, such as BIMSTEC, MIT and BIN. | ||
Coastal & Port connectivity roads | Synergy with Sagarmala. | ||
Expressways | NC stretches converted to expressway. | ||
Total under Bharatmala Pariyojana | ' | ||
NH remaining under NHDP | |||
Total to be built or upgraded | ' |