Close to 90 per cent of the
dedicated freight corridors have been commissioned till 10 February 2024, the
Parliament was informed last week.
Indian Railways has undertaken
the ambitious project of constructing two Dedicated Freight Corridors (DFCs),
namely Eastern and Western Dedicated Freight Corridors (EDFC & WDFC), to
facilitate faster evacuation of freight traffic.
“Construction of EDFC has been fully completed
and 1,220 km out of 1,506 km of WDFC has been completed,” Railway Minister
Ashwini Vaishnaw said in a written reply in the Rajya Sabha.
As of February 2024, a
cumulative route length of 2,557 km has been completed out of the total of
2,843 km. Additionally, the Ministry of
Railways has started train operations in the completed sections of two
corridors.
The Dedicated Freight Corridor
Corporation of India Limited (DFCCIL) — a subsidiary of the Indian Railways and
a special purpose vehicle set up to implement the project — has set a target to
complete the WDFC by March 2024, barring a 109-km stretch between Vaitarna
(river in Maharashtra) and Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (JNPT).
Notably, the work
on the Western DFC stretch from Vaitarna to JNPT, which faced delays due to
land acquisition issues, has commenced. The last mile
stretch to JNPT is crucial for the full-scale commissioning of the Western-DFC.
Additionally, although the
DFCCIL has completed the EDFC segment from Ludhiana to Sonnagar in Bihar, the
envisioned extension spanning 538 kilometres to Dankuni in West Bengal via
Gomoh and Andal will not be undertaken by the agency. The Ministry of Railways
is currently exploring alternative options for this extension.
· Tags : Dedicated Freight Corridor, DFCCIL, Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor, JNPA, Western Dedicated Freight Corridor