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UES CEREE-COM ae
Chapter 6
fvectment &
Infrastructure 2Investment & Infrastructure
The Role of Infrastructure in India’s Growth
Infrastructure as a Growth Driver:
+ Infrastructure—physical (transport, energy, housing), digital (telecom,
broadband), and social (health, education, sanitation)—has been central to
India’s development.
* Over the last five years, the government has significantly increased public
spending on infrastructure.
Need for Private Sector Involvement:
* Government funding alone cannot bridge the infrastructure gap. The
private sector needs to play a more active role.
* Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs): For sustainable infrastructure grow
both the government and private sector must work together.Investment & Infrastructure
Trends in Capital Expenditure
Capital Expenditure Growth:
* Between FY20 and FY24, the government increased capital expenditure
(capex) in key infrastructure sectors at an average rate of 38.8%.
* National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP):
© Launched as a long-term roadmap for infrastructure investment.
© Targets 111 lakh crore of infrastructure investment from FY20 to FY25.
© Projects are monitored through the India Investment Grid, which helps
track progress and identify bottlenecks.Investment & Infrastructure
National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP)
* Introduced in August 2021 to unlock value from existing public
infrastructure by leasing brownfield assets to private players.
* Targeted monetisation: 6 lakh crore for FY22-FY25.
* As of FY24, %3.86 lakh crore worth of assets have been monetised, with
roads, power, coal, and mining sectors leading.Investment & Infrastructure
Challenges in Infrastructure Spending
* In FY25, infrastructure capex was disrupted by general elections (due to
the Model Code of Conduct, limiting new approvals).
* Heavy monsoon also affected the progress of infrastructure projects.
* Post-election recovery: Between July and November 2024, capex picked
up, reaching 60% of the budgeted allocation for the fiscal year.Investment & Infrastructure
Physical Connectivity Infrastructure: Railways
* Steady Expansion of Rail Network:
© 2,282 km of rail network commissioned from April to November 2024.
* Rolling Stock Production (Trains & Coaches):
© 17 new pairs of Vande Bharat trains introduced.Investment & Infrastructure
Physical Connectivity Infrastructure: Railways
Key Projects:
* Mumbai-Ahmedabad High-Speed Rail (Bullet Train)
© Approved in 2015; 508 km long.
© Supported by Japan; project cost revised to %1.08 lakh crore.
° As of October 2024, 47.17% physical progress achieved.
* Dedicated Freight Corridors (DFCs):
© Transforming logistics by separating freight and passenger traffic.
© 96.4% of the planned 2,843 km network is already operational.Investment & Infrastructure
Physical Connectivity Infrastructure: Railways
Sustainability and Modernization Efforts:
* Net-Zero Carbon Target:
o Indian Railways aims for 30 GW of renewable energy by 2029-30.
© Solar (375 MW) and wind (103 MW) power commissioned so far.
* PPP in Railways:
© 17 projects completed (716,434 crore), 8 ongoing (16,614 crore).
+ Passenger Amenities:
© Amrit Bharat Station Scheme: Redevelopment of 1,337 stations.
© One Station One Product Scheme: Promotes local artisans.
o Wi-Fi Expansion: Available at 6,112 railway stations.Investment & Infrastructure
Physical Connectivity Infrastructure: Road Transport
+ India’s Expanding Road Network:
© Total road length: 63.4 lakh km.
© National Highways (NH) network: 1,46,195 km (just 2% of total roads
but carries 40% of freight traffic).
* Corridor-Based Development Approach:
© Bharatmala Pariyojana: 34,800 km NH planned; 76% projects
awarded, 18,926 km completed.
© Char Dham Mahamarg Pariyojana: 825 km project, 620 km complet
o High-Speed Corridors: Expanded from 93 km (2014) to 2,474 km
(2024).Investment & Infrastructure
Physical Connectivity Infrastructure: Road Transport
Key Sustainable Initiatives in Road Transport:
+ Multi-Modal Logistics Parks (MMLP): 6 operational to reduce logistics
costs.
* Vehicle Scrapping Policy: 1.62 lakh vehicles scrapped.
+ Ropeway Transport Development: 15 projects in progress.Investment & Infrastructure
Physical Connectivity Infrastructure: Civil Aviation
Air Connectivity Growth
+ UDAN (Regional Connectivity Scheme):
© 619 routes operational.
© 88 airports, including 2 water aerodromes and 13 heliports, now
connected.
* Airport Expansion:
© Cargo handling capacity increased to 8 million MT in FY24.Investment & Infrastructure
Physical Connectivity Infrastructure: Ports & Shipping
Enhancing Maritime Infrastructure
* Vadhavan Mega Port (%76,000 crore investment).
* Sagarmala Programme:
© Modernizing ports, improving connectivity, boosting coastal shipping.
o International Port Linkages:
= Chabahar Port (Iran): 43% rise in vessel traffic.
= Sittwe Port (Myanmar): Enhancing North-East connectivity.Investment & Infrastructure
   
Digital Connectivity: 5G & Data Infrastructure
* 5G Rollout:
© 779 out of 783 districts covered.
* Telecom Expansion in Remote Areas:
© BharatNet: 6.92 lakh km optical fiber laid.
© North-East, islands, and border areas receiving enhanced connectivity.
* India’s Growing Data Center Market:
° Current capacity: 977 MW (105% YoY growth).
© Expected market size: $11.6 billion by 2032.Investment & Infrastructure
Rural Infrastructure
* Jal Jeevan Mission:
© 79.1% rural households now have tap water connections.
o Ensured safe drinking water for 69.23 lakh households in quality-
affected regions.
* Swachh Bharat Mission (Grameen):
© 3.64 lakh villages declared ODF Plus (ensuring waste management and
hygiene).
o Successful waste management models in Kerala & Madhya Pradesh.Investment & Infrastructure
Urban Infrastructure
* Swachh Bharat Mission-Urban:
© Garbage-free cities initiative, solid waste management expansion.
* Smart Cities Mission:
© 7,479 projects worth %1.5 lakh crore completed.
© 100 cities with Integrated Command & Control Centers (ICCCs).
* Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY-U):
© 1.18 crore houses sanctioned; PMAY-U 2.0 launched.Investment & Infrastructure
Conclusion
* Challenges:
© Private sector participation in infrastructure is still low.
o Need better risk-sharing, contract enforcement, and financing models.
* Future Vision:
o Sustainable, disaster-resilient urbanization.
o More emphasis on PPPs, renewable energy, and last-mile connectivity.