As Buzz Builds Around IRCTC’s Tejas Express, Will Privatisation Take Wing?

The national transporter is in the process of finalising bidding documents for inviting private players to run about 150 trains.

New Delhi: Buoyed by the successful run of the first ‘corporate’ train between Delhi and Lucknow, the Indian Railways has received strong interest from the private sector even as various unions continue to oppose the plan.

According to sources in the national transporter, at least three Indian airlines have also expressed initial interest in bidding and operating certain train routes as a possible last-mile connectivity solution that they can offer their customers.

Much of this excitement is due to the initial demand that the IRCTC-operated Tejas Express has been attracting. The next Tejas service, which will run between Mumbai and Ahmedabad, is currently getting ready.

Reeling under mounting losses, the Indian Railways has firmed up plans to offer about 50 high demand routes for private train operations, in a move that will involve roughly 150 trains.

The Railways wants to lease out to private operators a number of long distance or overnight journey trains. These include routes such as Delhi-Mumbai, Delhi-Lucknow, Delhi-Jammu/Katra, Delhi-Howrah, Secunderabad-Delhi, Delhi-Chennai, Mumbai-Chennai, Howrah-Chennai and Howrah-Mumbai.

It has also proposed to invite private players for the intercity express on over 12 routes including the Mumbai-Ahmedabad and Mumbai-Pune journeys. Besides this, there are also proposals to operate suburban trains in Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai and Secunderabad by private players.

Currently, the national transporter is in the process of finalising bidding documents to invite private players to run about 150 trains. The cost of these 150 trains is estimated to be Rs 22,500 crore as one rake will consist of 16 coaches.

Also Read: Large Rail PSUs to Hit the Public Markets to Meet Highest-Ever Divestment Target

It will be decided through competitive bidding and for this, the tender document is being finalised taking various factors into account, sources told The WireThe process envisages prospective operators bidding for a minimum of 12 trains and a maximum of 50 trains, which include overnight and day-long trains.

Asked about airlines’ interest in train operation, sources told that some airlines are exploring acquiring certain train routes as a last-mile connectivity solution to increase the demand for their air routes. There is also a possibility that some players may discontinue their non-profitable air routes and focus on train routes instead.

In countries abroad, some airlines have chosen to do this, although its unclear whether the precarious financial health of the aviation sector in India will permit such an endeavour.

“Currently nothing is concrete. Once the tender is floated, the picture will be clear and we will come to know who all are coming,” sources added.

When asked, Indian Railways spokesman K. Shyama Prasad said that the ministry had no information on this and that there would be more meetings before anything is finalised. n it.

According to the potential tender conditions though, private operators will be given freedom to either purchase new trains or acquire it from the Railways on lease. Since this is the first time in the country that the public transporter is allowing private train operators to run passenger services, the government is approaching the final process with caution. 

While private players are keen to import customised trains and are seeking dedicated routes to ensure punctuality, the Railways has to take a final call on the issue.

However, the national transporter will still be in control on the safety front, giving away only pricing decision to private train operators.

While the signalling system, loco pilots and platform will remain with the Railways, catering, onboard housekeeping, ticket pricing and checking, infotainment and other amenities will be the train operator’s responsibility.

IRCTC, the Railways subsidiary, which was being divested of 12.5% of its shares through an IPO, will pay nearly Rs 13 lakh per day in haulage and lease charges and is expected to generate about Rs 16 lakh to 17 lakh per day in revenue from the Delhi-Lucknow Tejas Express.

Arun Kumar Das is a senior journalist and can be contacted at akdas2005@gmail.com

Large Rail PSUs to Hit the Public Markets to Meet Highest-Ever Divestment Target

The Indian Railways has unleashed a series of IPOs to mop up about Rs 1,500 crore in the current fiscal.

New Delhi: Reeling under limited fiscal space amid an economic slowdown, the Narendra Modi government is opening up greater private investment with a steady stream of public sector units (PSUs) stepping up their disinvestment drive.

The Indian Railways has unleashed a series of IPOs to mop up about Rs 1,500 crore to begin with in the current fiscal.

While the IRCTC, the railways’ ticketing and catering arm, would open up its Rs 650 crore initial public offer (IPO) on Monday, two more railways PSUs are gearing up to follow suit in quick succession.

RailTel and IRFC, the telecom infrastructure provider and financial service arm of the Railways respectively, would list their shares on the market shortly as part of the broader quest to achieve an all-time high disinvestment target of Rs 1.05 lakh crore. 

Divestment revenue, crucial for bridging the fiscal deficit gap, is in focus as the government has prepared a list of about 43 PSUs to be divested in phases.

Also Read: Railways Hopes to Get Passengers to Pay up to 71% More for Train Tickets

The 12.5% divestment of IRCTC is expected to elicit a good response as it has a unique business model, and, more importantly, the company does not have any competition across any business segment.

The Indian Railway Finance Corporation (IRFC), the dedicated financing arm of the Indian Railways for mobilising funds from domestic as well as overseas capital markets would go for 5% divestment.  

RailTel, which is providing Wi-Fi at all major stations across the country, has achieved a turnover of Rs 1,017 crore and posted a profit before tax amounting to Rs 179 crore and net profit of Rs 110 crore during 2018-19 on a standalone basis.

According to sources, RailTel will offload about a 10% government stake through its IPO shortly. 

Most PSUs to go for divestement

Barring a few, all rail PSUs will go for divestment as per the decision. Railways PSUs such as Konkan Railway, Mumbai Railway Vikas Corporation (MRVC) Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC) and Braithwaite & Company Limited (BCL), however, are not being considered for disinvestment.

Railways blue-chip companies such as IRCON, RITES and RVNL are in for offloading about 13% of their shares by the year-end or early next year.

Like Air India, the rail PSU Concor is slated to be on strategic disinvestment where railways will have to offload its major share.

Though the decision to divest PSUs was taken in 2010, it has got the traction recently with the concerned ministries, including railways, stepping up the drive to meet the goal.

Besides divestment, the Railways is also pushing for the privatisation of its passenger service amid a whopping loss of over Rs 40,000 crore in the segment.

While the IRCTC has been nominated to run two private trains on Delhi-Lucknow and Mumbai-Ahmedabad routes, there are about 50 routes up for grab across the country including Delhi-Mumbai, Delhi-Kolkata, Delhi-Patna and Chennai-Mumbai.

The Railways will lease out the paths to private players while the signalling and platform will remain with the public behemoth.

Arun Kumar Das can be contacted at akdas2005@gmail.com