Context: An analysis of the provision related to Railways in the Budget and associated issues.
Provisions related to Indian Railways in Budget 2021-22:
National Rail Plan (NRP) for 2030: Aims to increase the share of railways in freight, rectifying the pre-Independence and post-Independence bias, and develop capacity that will cater to demand in 2050.
Maps the existing railway network on a GIS platform and identifies gaps.
Reiterates policy issues and lists operational procedures and constraints (wagon policy, haulage charges, terminal charges) within Indian Railways (which can be improved by breaking down silos).
Analysis of the existing network, with additions (of National Infrastructure Pipeline) also built-in.
Commissioning of Western dedicated freight corridor (DFC) and the Eastern DFC: by June 2022; Parts of DFC will be in public-private partnership (PPP) mode.
Aims to increase the speed of freight trains and free up capacity.
Other Proposed Corridors: East Coast corridor (Kharagpur to Vijaywada), an East-West corridor (Bhusaval to Kharagpur/Dankuni) and a North-South corridor (Itarsi to Vijayawada).
Electrification of all broad-gauge routes by December 2023.
Ensuring Safety and passenger amenity measures.
Associated issues with Railways sector:
Low Operating Ratio (OR): 0.59 for freight and 1.92 for passenger traffic. (NRP 2018-19)
Cross-subsidization: by keeping low passenger fares and high freight rates.(bias towards passenger)
Preference to passenger trains over freight trains on tracks: resulting in low speed of freight trains (average 24 Km/hour) and very high transit time; which also raises multi-modal issues.
Over-utilization of capacity: High-Density Routes (HDNs) and Highly-Used Networks (HUNs) carry 80% of the traffic, and there are sections where capacity utilization is more than 100%.
Way forward:
Gauge conversion and electrification of HUNs: used primarily for passengers.
Increase rail share in total freight carried to 44%: by increasing average speed (to say 50 km/hour) and reducing costs (say, by 30% ) (Western and Eastern DFCs will help in achievement of both).
Bring new tracks and investments: as supplements to DFCs, HDNs and HUNs, terminals and sidings.
Reduction of tariffs for bulk commodities: like coal, iron ore, raw material for steel and fertilizers.
Since these are traditional bulk commodities for railways and reduction in cost will not have much impact in increasing the share on railways.
But for other commodities, reduction in cost will attract commodities to prefer using railways.