SAIL has decided to go ahead with the investment
plan despite not having any order indication from its largest buyer Indian
Railways, Prakash said at a panel discussion at the Global Business Summit
(GBS) in the national capital. The
chairman said such kind of confidence is a result of growth-oriented policies
of the government. "Last week, we decided to put up an $800-million
investment into a mill, because I am confident that railways will go nowhere
and they will have to buy from me if I put up a mill. So, I have taken a
decision like that. So, that is the kind of confidence that comes when the
policies we know are growth oriented, and they are bound to continue," he
said.
Prakash said
SAIL had been following up with the railways for the past seven years for their
future demand so accordingly the steel maker can plan rail production.
"I think, last seven years, we have been
running after Indian railways, saying, how much rail track will you buy from
us? Should we put up a new mill? Should I make an investment into a new mill?
We can produce good railways. Will you buy it? They said, I am not going to give you any comfort about what I will buy
in the future," the Chairman said.
SAIL, under the Ministry of Steel, makes rails at
its Bhilai Steel Plant in Chhattisgarh and forged wheels at Durgapur Steel
Plant in West Bengal.