Updates on progress of Ahmedabad – Mumbai Bullet Train Project

New Delhi: News agency Press Trust of India has in its report mentioned some of the progresses made in The Mumbai – Ahmedabad bullet train project.

– The National High Speed Rail Corporation (NHSRCL) has already acquired 63 per cent of the land for the project — about 77% land in Gujarat, 80% in Dadar Nagar Haveli and 22% in Maharashtra. Officials said there are still issues in acquiring land in areas like Palghar in Maharashtra and Navsari in Gujarat.

-Tenders for civil works for 345 kms out of 508 kms alignment, or 68 percent of civil works, have already been floated. This includes six MAHSR stations (including one underground station in Mumbai). The works related to utility diversion are progressing well and the construction of Sabarmati passenger hub (a multi modal hub) in Sabarmati, Gujarat has also started.

– The hostel building of High Speed Training Institute ( which is presently being used for COVID patients) and training tracks in Vadodara are also completed.

– One section of the Ahmedabad-Mumbai high-speed rail corridor is likely to be tendered out within three months after nearly 90 per cent of the land acquisition for the project is completed.

– Last year, the company had floated nine civil work tenders which could not be opened because of the coronavirus pandemic, NHSRCL MD Achal Khare said.One of the civil work contracts for construction of stations, bridges, viaducts, maintenance depots, and tunnels across the network is to the tune of Rs 20,000 crore.

The report states: The Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train project is scheduled to be completed by December 2023. Apart from land acquisition, another major cause for delay could be cost escalation owing to a fall in the rupee against the Japanese yen.The total cost of the project is pegged at Rs 1.08 lakh crore and as per the shareholding pattern, the Government of India is to pay Rs 10,000 crore to the NHSRCL, while the two states involved, Gujarat and Maharashtra, are to pay Rs 5,000 crore each. The rest is to be paid by Japan through a loan at 0.1 per cent interest.