Analysis
The ambitious Bharatmala programme will entail construction of 60,000 km of national highways across India. (representational image) (NHAI)
Adani Road Transport, a wholly owned subsidiary of Adani Enterprises, Canadian institutional investor CDPQ (Indian Highways Concessions Trust) and the Singapore-based Cube Highways are among the firms ubmitted bids for three bundles of Toll Operate Transfer (TOT) offered by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), The Economic Times reported.
TOT model was developed with the aim to encourage private participation in the highways sector.
Under the TOT model, concessionaire pay a one-time concession fee upfront (lump sum), which then enables the concessionaire to operate and toll the project stretch for the pre-determined 30 year concession period. This model is applicable to EPC and BOT (Annuity) highway projects, which have completed at least 2 years since the date of completion.
The model seeks to address the risks associated with such a long concession contract and there are multiple provisions in the model concession agreement, which are designed to take care of eventualities like roadway expansion, high toll traffic variation to ensure that concessionaires are not exposed to undue risks.
While ToT Bundle 6 comprises of 331 Kms of road projects including 4 Lane Agra Bypass of 32.8 km and 4 Lane Shivpuri Jhansi of 75.3 Km, ToT Bundle 7 consists of 135-km long Eastern Peripheral Expressway of NCR and ToT Bundle 8 consists of 139-km Borkhedi-Wadner-Deodhari-Kelapur- Maharashtra/Telangana Border of NH-7.
Monetising roads assets will be critical to the success of the National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP) unveiled by the Centre in September 2021. NMP envisages an aggregate monetisation potential of Rs 6.0 lakh crores through core assets of the Central Government, over a four-year period, from FY 2022 to FY 2025.
Monetising road assets is estimated to account for 27% of the NMP in value terms. The government aims to generate Rs 1.6 lakh crore by monetising 26,700 km of four-lane-and-above national highways via the toll-operate-transfer (TOT) and the infrastructure investment trust (InvIT) routes at Rs 6 crore per km.
Adani Enterprises and construction firm DP Jain & Co emerged as the highest bidder for National Highway Authority of India’s (NHAI’s) fifth bundle of roads auctioned through toll-operate-transfer (TOT) mechanism.
Under the fifth round of TOT, NHAI offered a 20-year lease period for two bundles with a total length of 159.5 km. Both toll roads are located in Gujarat. The first bundle size is 53.6 km and the second is 105 km.
Successful asset monetisation can greatly ease the NHAI’s debt burden
The NHAI has accelerated its pace of national highway construction, from only 2,623 km in fiscal 2017 to 4,175 km in fiscal 2021. However, more projects being executed on the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) and hybrid annuity model (HAM) modes has meant a greater burden on public funds, with the NHAI’s balance sheet seeing its debt-to-equity ratio tripling to 1.5 times as of fiscal 2021.
"Given the ambitious targets under Bharatmala and the construction of high-value expressways, along with higher repayment of borrowings, the NHAI’s fund requirements are expected to double to Rs 10 lakh crore over the next 5 years vis-à-vis the previous 5 years. If these funding requirements are met, we estimate that the NHAI could construct ~25,000 km of national highways over fiscal 2022-2026P, compared with 17,228 km over fiscal 2017- 2021." research firm CRISIL observed