Detailed project report (DPR)
of a Rs 41,000-crore international transshipment port project at Great Nicobar
Island in the Bay of Bengal is being finalised by the government, and it will
go ahead with the implementation of the project in the next few months, a
senior official said on Sunday 16 Feb ’25.
Great Nicobar Transshipment port project has
been under scrutiny over environmental concerns. The project has received the
environmental clearances and nod from National Green Tribunal (NGT) and now
there is no hurdle in its implementation. The DPR of the project is also
finalised and we are going ahead for its further implementation in the next few
months,” Ports, Shipping and Waterways secretary T K Ramachandran said...Larsen and Toubro Ltd, Afcons
Infrastructure Ltd, and JSW Infrastructure Ltd are among the companies that
have submitted EoIs for the international transhipment port project. The
proposed port in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands will have the ultimate
capacity to handle 16 million containers per year, and in the first phase, to
be commissioned by 2028 at a cost of Rs 18,000 crore, it will handle more than
4 million containers. Other projects planned around the transhipment port
include an airport, a township and a power plant.
The project is located on the
international trade route, with existing transhipment terminals like Singapore,
Klang and Colombo in proximity. The project focuses on three key drivers, which
can result in making it a leading container transhipment port — strategic
location in terms of proximity (40 nautical miles) with the international
shipping trade route, availability of natural water depth of over 20m and
carrying capacity of transhipment cargo from all the ports in the proximity,
including Indian ports. The proposed facility is envisaged to be developed in
four phases. The estimated cost for Phase 1 of the proposed transhipment port
is around Rs 18,000 crore, which includes the construction of breakwaters,
dredging, reclamation, berths, storage areas, building and utilities,
procurement and installation of equipment and development of the port colony,
with core infrastructure going to be developed with the government support.
Public-private partnership
(PPP) will be encouraged for this project via landlord mode. The PPP concessionaire will
have the flexibility to develop a storage area, container handling equipment
and other infrastructure based on the concessionaire’s own market and business
assessment, subject to the minimum guaranteed traffic. The concessionaire would be awarded a long-term PPP concession of 30 to
50 years (based on requirement), will be responsible for the provision(s) of
port services and shall have the rights to levy, collect and retain charges
from port users. Currently, nearly 75 per cent of India’s transhipped cargo
is handled at ports outside India. Colombo, Singapore and Klang handle more
than 85 per cent of this cargo, with more than half of it handled at Colombo
port.