LANCO bags two toll road projects in Karnataka

August 4, 2008

LANCO Kondapalli Power Pvt Ltd, a subsidiary of LANCO Infratech Ltd, has bagged the contract for construction and operation of two road projects in Karnataka on Build, Operate and Transfer (BOT) basis under the National Highways Development Project (NHDP) Phase III.

The company has formed two Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) – LANCO Hoskote Highways Pvt Ltd and LANCO Devihalli Highways Pvt Ltd for undertaking the projects. The concession agreements for the projects have been signed with the National Highways Authority Ltd. The two road projects are the 81 km Bangalore-Hoskote-Mudbagal stretch on National Highway 4 and 82 km Neelamangla – Devihalli stretch on National Highway 48. The project involves six laning of 16 km stretch and four laning of the remaining stretches. The total project cost is estimated at Rs 1,006 crore. The concession periods are 20 and 25 years for the two projects respectively, including 30 months of construction period. The contracts have been awarded through a competitive bidding process.

LANCO Group is one of the fastest growing corporate entities in India. LANCO has more than two decades of experience operating in the core sectors of Power Generation, Power Trading, Realty, Engineering and Construction, Information Technology and Manufacturing. At present, the power portfolio includes an operating capacity of 518 MW and additional capacities under construction aggregating to more than 3,200 MW.  The Construction and EPC division of the company is executing various orders worth more than Rs 7,500 crore.  LANCO is also developing LANCO Hills, one of the largest integrated township properties in Hyderabad, which will have a developed area of more than 30 million square feet and one of the tallest residential towers in the world.  The development of the property is estimated to cost Rs 5,500 crore.

Source: moneycontrol.com

Bid to widen highway begins

August 4, 2008

Ranchi, Aug. 1: National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) has set the ball rolling for the four-laning of Hazaribagh-Ranchi stretch of NH-33, considered to be the lifeline of Jharkhand.

NHAI, which functions under the Union ministry of road transport and highways, has invited a global expression of interest (called request for qualification in technical parlance) from construction majors. The last date to respond is August 29.

“It would be a 75km stretch of NH-33 costing around Rs 600 crore. The tenders would be on build, operate, transfer (BOT) annuity basis,” said H.C. Arora, the chief general manager of NHAI, who looks after projects in Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand and Delhi.

This would be the third time that NHAI has invited tenders for the same stretch.

Earlier, two efforts to finalise the project through BOT-toll basis proved futile with no parties responding to pre-qualification bids apparently due to Naxalism and law and order problems in the state. Under BOT-toll, the contractors awarded works are supposed to invest the entire project cost and realise the same by collecting toll taxes for the next 30 years or so.

Under the annuity basis, although the construction company would invest the entire project cost, a fixed annual sum as annuity from the government would ensure that the former gets back its invested money.

In a related development, the ministry is contemplating to turn the 150-km stretch of NH-33 between Ranchi and Jamshedpur into a single package. Earlier, the stretch was divided into two packages — one between Ranchi and Rargaon and the other between Rargaon and Mohulia.

Arora added that the NHAI would soon invite expressions of interest for the Ranchi-Jamshedpur stretch, too.

The ministry was in favour of inviting the tenders on BOT-toll basis. The overall cost of the project would be around Rs 1,300-1,400 crore.

The proposed Hazaribagh-Ranchi four-lane road would end near Vikas Vidyalaya by taking a bypass of about 20km before meeting Ranchi-Jamshedpur highway near Rampur.

The state and central authorities are discussing whether the proposed Ring Road project for Ranchi can be merged with the highways’ proposed bypass on a cost-sharing basis. Arora added that the four-laning project of both the stretches would be part of National Highway Development Programme-Phase III.

Source: telegraphindia.com

Gammon India Ltd sees FY09 topline at Rs 3K cr

August 2, 2008

Gammon India has declared its results for the quarter ended June 2008 (Q1). The company’s standalone net sales were at Rs 585.24 crore versus Rs 540.31 crore.

Parvez Umrigar , MD, Gammon Infrastructure Projects said that Gammon India Limited, the contracting arm of the company will book a topline turnover of Rs 3,000 crore for the current year. He added that Gammon Infrastructure, the development arm is more of a value based play and they have capital investment plans of around Rs 7,500 crore scattered over the next few years.

Excerpts from CNBC-TV18’s exclusive interview with Parvez Umrigar:

Q: Numbers look good, Operating profits margins stood at about 71%, the key concern right now is whether are not incremental orders are expected to slow down and more importantly for the current order book that you enjoy at Rs 9,500 crore is there an issue on execution?

A: The privatization space across the sectors continues to keep pace and infact the government has given us a choice that would like to promote more on a privatization model.

We have had some slow down in the road sector because the implementation under NHI new model agreement have had some issues raised by some developers and that once in a while you do change a model agreement so those things arise but otherwise if you see the action in BOT (Build, Operate, Transfer) space for example the government just announced the qualifications of Ennore.

Q: So out of the Rs 9,500 crore of order book, how much execution will be possible in this year and the incremental orders that are coming in, what is the average size that you are looking to bid right now?

A: Gammon India Limited, the contracting arm will book a topline turnover of Rs 3,000 crore for the current year. Gammon Infrastructure, the development arm is more of a value based play and they have capital investment plans of around Rs 7,500 crore scattered over the next few years.

Q: We understand you have 14 projects underway, what is the kind of outlay for these projects?

A: The 14 Special Purpose Vehicles (SPV) companies that we have has an overall capital outlay of Rs 7,000 crore which would involve an equity investment of Gammon itself of around Rs 500 crore.

Q: What is the overall target for FY09 for Gammon Infrastructure at this point in time and what are the kinds of projects you are bidding for right now?

A: Gammon Infrastructure for the current year we expect to grow our current 14 SPVs by at least four more, there two SPVs where we are lowest in the bid and we await the letter of intent (LOI) ending which we can make the official announcement. The topline for the current year on a turnover basis will be around Rs 250 crore.

Source: moneycontrol.com