Complete Case Study 3

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 6

Case Study3

Summary

Submitted By:

Rhythm Gandhi (171020011033)


Electrical Department
Submitted To:
Dr. Kshitij Bhargava
ASSIGNMENT
I. Read the case study of “Mumbai-Ahmedabad High Speed Rail (Bullet Train) National
Alliance of People’s Movements (NAPM) June 2018 A People’s Critique”. Prepare a
summary of key points mentioned in the study.

❖ MAHSR (Mumbai-Ahmedabad High Speed Rail) has been proposed between Mumbai and
Ahmedabad with 12 stations - Mumbai, Thane, Virar, Boisar (Maharashtra), Vapi, Bilimora, Surat,
Bharuch, Vadodara, Anand, Ahmedabad, and Sabarmati (Gujarat).
❖ Total route length of 508 km and the total project cost is estimated to be ₹1.1 lakh crores. The
scheduled completion deadline is August 15, 2023.
❖ National High-Speed Rail Corporation Limited (NHSRCL) is implementing the project. NHSRCL
is a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) with equity participation by Ministry of Railways (central
government) and the state governments of Gujarat and Maharashtra.
❖ The following report is based on a joint study conducted by JICA (Japan International Cooperation
Agency) and ministry of Railways, GOI (Government of India). It has a comprehensive discussion
on all the aspects of MAHSR project.
❖ It is disappointing is that the aim of the study appears to be justifying the project rather than
dispassionately assessing the viability and relevance of this project.
❖ Therefore, In the following chapter we will take up key concern one by one:

A. First concern: - where are the users?


• The report claims that ridership of 40k passengers in the year 2003. But the current
riders are less than half. Hence the report is very optimistic.
• This traffic forecast is done on a study which relates GDP rate and air traffic over
years.
• Increase in income of people, decrease in air fare due to advancement in technology
will boost the demand of bullet train as claimed by report.
• All evidences available suggests that current boom in domestic air traffic is likely to
keep the fare much lower levels than proposed fare of Rupee 3k for a bullet train
ride between Mumbai and Ahmedabad.
B. Second concern: - How will the bullet train earn back?
• Report claims that Indian bullet train will be the cheapest in the world is definitely
a lie.
• Turkey and China both have cheaper fares on similar distance ranges.
• Chinese bullet train for 500 Km costs 200-300 Chinese yuan (1000-1500 Rupee)
and hence India to run bullet train less than 1000-1500 Rupee for 500 Km is merely
impossible.
• A study at IIM-Ahmedabad showed that 100 daily trips at full occupancy would be
required with a fare of ₹5000 between Ahmedabad and Mumbai to make the bullet
train financially viable.
C. Third concern: - Myth of time saving and the idea of transport
• The value of travel-time savings is not a constant. The elasticity of this value may
depend on many factors:
• Over the years it has been realized that speed is not the only parameter in transport
parameter planning’s. enhancing people’s accessibility to destinations is equally
important.
• Therefore, estimation of transport projects must be in terms of increase in access.
All people don’t live near station, they travel to nodes and these parts of journey
can be called access and egress.
• Access and Egress at times play important role in people’s choice of travel mode.
• High Speed Rail (HSR) is not competitive against personal automobile or
conventional railway for distance less than 150 Km.
• The average speed of HSR with stoppage at every 20 miles will be similar to that
of conventional trains operated properly.
• Therefore, HSR with speed more than 250 Kmph is advantageous only in the
distance range of 500-1000 km.
D. Forth concern: - What is inspiring the MAHSR: Recent history of transport ‘mega’-projects.
• Some commentators have cited the example of Rajdhani trains and Delhi Metro as
previous experiments, which also had raised similar suspicions among a group of
scholars and civil society members.
• First, much of the ridership on Rajdhani trains is possibly due to bad condition of
superfast and express trains in terms of punctuality and operational regularity.
• Second, Rajdhani trains run on the same track which is used by the other trains.
Therefore, land, forests, and people are not affected in any particular way. HSR
route will be an exclusive Right-Of-Way (ROW) which will put the forests in
danger.
• It is true, as the Japanese experience suggests, that Shinkansen technology is
absolutely safe. These trains have not witnessed any fatal accidents in their history
of almost 50 years.
• The government of India had set up a high-level committee named National
Transport Development Policy Committee (NTDPC) with the objective of
developing a long-term national transport policy. In its report submitted in the
year 2012, the committee had recommended that priority should be semi high-
speed rail (160-200 kmph), not HSR:
• “Thus, given the substantial funding required from government to implement HSR
projects, a programme for raising speed to 160-200 kmph on selected existing
routes should be undertaken till the time the HSR projects are found commercially
justified or operationally required to cater to the country’s growth and mobility
needs.”

❖ Economic sense of white Elephant: Who is being helped - Indian middle class or the global elites?

I. JICA (Japan International Cooperation agency) is financing the project by lending 88k crore
rupees at an interest rate of 0.1%. Payback period is 50 year with a moratorium of 15 years.
II. There is no other agency such as world bank is lending at such low rates of interest. It is a
part of Japan`s economic policy and it serves Japan`s interests much more than the
interests of India.
III. Japanese yen is in search of new markets for the advancements in technology that can be
put to a productive use if it is sold to the other countries like India. In this particular sector
of high-speed rail, Japan is facing fierce competition after France and china.
IV. The major concern is not about interest rate, but the relative strength of currencies
Japanese yen and Indian rupee. Indian rupee is continuously getting depreciated against
the Japanese yen (1 rupee = 1.42 Japanese yen currently).
V. At the time of 50-year loan repayment period, the 88k crore rupee loan would become 3
times more of the original loan amount, this will put a huge burden on Indian economy.
VI. Through a PPP project, it is not clear what the exact model of financing MAHSR will be,
however it is not must forgotten how badly some of the most ambitious projects PPP
projects of transport sector have failed in recent year. For example, Delhi Metro`s Airport
express line.
VII. Delhi Metro`s Airport express line was awarded to reliance led consortium in 2008 which
could become operational in feb 2011. The line was shut down in July 2012.
VIII. Blames were exchanged between DMRC and DAMEPL, the reliance led consortium.
IX. Claims were made that will boost the ‘Make in India’ initiative.
X. Japanese firms are reluctant to source locally and have already raised concerns about the
quality of work in SAIL and Jindal steel. Therefore, this project will primarily benefit the
Japanese firms like Nippon steel.
XI. The government is telling us that this project will boost the economy, scientific research
has shown that many smaller projects than a single mega project contribute positively to
economic development and employment creation.
XII. Mega projects operating at high energy levels leads to spatial polarisation and
concentration of benefits in few centres rather than building inter regional connectivity.
XIII. India had plenty of overcapacity systems including installed electricity capacity.

❖ Environmental Danger
• According to the feasibility report, the route of MAHSR projects dissects multiple reserved
forests and mangroves, their estimate suggests that 80k trees will have to cut down.
• Apart from the loss of forest along with its biodiversity and water retention contributions,
this will also remove the existing carbon sequestration of these many trees; a clear climate
-negative action.
• Majors environmental concerns are listed below:
a) Huge amount of steel, cement will be consumed by the project. Both steel and
cement manufacturing consume massive amounts of coal, that will cause emission
of great quantities of CO₂ and other pollutants which harm our global environment.
b) Mega projects of these kinds employ massive amounts of energy-intensive
machinery and energy-intensive construction practices which mostly consume
heavy diesel oil. construction phase also adds to pollution.
c) The feasibility report does not present a comparative analysis of ‘total’ emission
caused by HSR and other modes.
d) Though the HSR will run on electricity, 68% of India’s electricity comes from
burning the dirtiest, most polluting fossil fuel - coal. Coal burning emits harmful
pollutants including heavy metals which cause cancer, radioactive neurotoxin
Mercury, SO₂ and NO₂ which cause acid.
e) According to study, per passenger-km energy consumption of “bullet trains” will
be about 3-4 times that of present Rajdhani express trains. The claim of lowering
carbon emission is only true in comparison with air travel.
f) The proposed route of HSR will pass through areas which possibly have shallow
aquifers. The construction of (digging for) the foundations for supporting pillars is
likely to puncture some of these aquifers leading to the loss of groundwater.
g) The HSR corridor is largely a rural area with agriculture, horticulture, forest etc.
during the construction, huge amount of fine dust will adversely affect agriculture
and horticulture, contaminate nearby water bodies, damage forest cover etc.
h) The farmlands which will be destroyed by this project have had been safeguards
against the health impacts of ambient air pollution.
i) The destruction of friendly farmlands to build a machine that is an enemy of
nature is idiotic and ridiculous.
❖ Information about social impacts
1. Resettlement in Palghar, Vadodara, Kheda and Ahmedabad is likely to be particularly large.
2. Residential colony to be resettled in Kathor.
3. One-third households with living duration of more than 50 years; three-fourth are more than
10 years old.
4. Wherever the route is close to the conventional line, PAHs are likely to be poor and as in
case of Ahmedabad, Muslims (60 PAHs [2] or 35% of the endangered while 14% share in
urban population) too. 40% are vulnerable population – children (0-10) and elderly (65+);
26% according to their definition of vulnerable.
5. 50% of persons have not completed elementary education.
6. 45% have their job location in less than 1 km.
7. Farmers of Palghar (122) and Kheda (175) are the worst affected.
8. The spatial developments around the stations will have bearing on the resources and
demography. Indirect and impacts spread over a longer period or arising after a time-lag are
not accounted for.
❖ Procedural Flaws and Legal Issues
a) Stakeholders’ meetings in Palghar, Bharuch, Vadodara.
b) NHSRCL claims that SIA (Social Impact Assessment) and EIA (Environmental Impact
Assessment) are not mandated by the law.
c) it is not made clear which law is being followed - State laws or central laws? Gujarat and
Maharashtra have different laws for land acquisition.
d) Public purpose declaration; requisition; procedural flaw- not on record in Bharuch.
e) Land acquisition process started officially. At some places, Gram Sabha was not invited.
f) What the NHSRCL is calling the “first round of consultation” involved talking to some
g) random people in few of the affected villages.
h) Farmers who are going to lose their land for the much-publicized Mumbai-Ahmedabad
bullet train project.
i) The farmers in Bharuch were irked as twice consecutively the government-administration
has tried to organize this public consultation on a very short notice.
j) The last time it tried to organize public consultations in Baroda and Bharuch on the same
day.
❖ Cases of HSR failure: Global Examples
a) The resistance movements opposing the high-speed rail have succeeded in forcing their
governments to break the agreement and trash the project.
b) Chinese faced major difficulties while implementing their plans in Brazil, Mexico and the
rest of Latin America.
c) None of those projects has been able to take off. Due to powerful protest against the
California HSR, where again the Chinese hold the contract, the project has moved at snail’s
pace.
❖ Way Ahead
a) This project is a clear case of collusion between capitalist interests and the state power.
b) Most of the commentators advocating in the favour of bullet train have not been able to link
it with the persisting problems of urban and regional mobility.
c) The bullet train project shows that national policies are being governed by capital’s need to
find novel markets at the cost of people’s needs remaining unmet.
d) These all expensive projects are being sold to the people in the name of national pride and
progress.
e) Rather than bringing inclusion, these “public-funded” projects are designed to increase the
exclusion and inequality of opportunities in the society.
f) The government thinks that the shine of bullet train will hide the failure of the government
actions in every sector.
g) The government thinks that India will become a member of the “gang of powerful countries”
by spending public money on dangerous vanity projects like bullet train, tall statues etc.
h) The government thinks that India should expose the obscene wealth and hide the perpetual
poverty.

You might also like