Union Cabinet Committee for Economic Affairs has approved the Rs 14,600
crore Chennai Metro Rail Project at a meeting held in New Delhi on January
28, 2009. The project is expected to be completed in 2014-15 and will be
implemented by Chennai Metro Rail Limited, a special purpose vehicle, joint
venture with equal equity participation from the Central and state
governments on the DMRC pattern.

The estimated cost of the project is around Rs14,600 crore including
escalation, central taxes and interest during the period of construction,
but excluding  state taxes and value of vacant state government land. Around
59 per cent of the cost will be met by concessional Official Development
Assistance (ODA) loan from the Government of Japan.  The loan agreement was
signed between the Government of India and the Government of Japan on
November 21, 2008 at Tokyo.

The Central Government will contribute 15 per cent of the project cost as
equity and 5 per cent as subordinate debt. The remaining share of the cost
(21 per cent) will be met by the state government in the form of equity (15
per cent) and subordinate debt (6 per cent).

According to official release, the project has set a record amongst
contemporary projects as the fastest in reaching financial closure,  by
securing Japanese Government funding in just 12 months and Government of
India  funding in 14 months,  whereas this process took more than 2 ½ years
in other cities.

As part of the project, two Corridors with a combined length of 45 kms will
be constructed in the first phase, of which 24 kms will be underground while
21 kms will be elevated.  Corridor I, with a length of 23.1kms (14.3 kms
underground and 8.8 kms elevated), will run from Washermanpet to the Airport
via Anna Salai. Corridor II, with a length of 22 kms (9.7 kms underground
and 12.3 kms elevated), will run from Chennai Central to St. Thomas Mount
via Koyambedu. The portions of Corridor I from Washermanpet to Saidapet on
Anna Salai, and Corridor II on Periyar EVR Salai and Anna Nagar 2nd Avenue,
will be underground and the remainder elevated.

The Metro system requires only 20 per cent of the energy used by a
road-based system.  A single six coach metro train will remove 16 buses or
300 cars or 600 two wheelers from the roads at peak hours.

It is expected that the trains will run every 5 minutes. The Metro is
expected to remove 13 lakh passengers per day from the roads by 2026, save
over 100 lives a year by reducing fatal accidents, and avoid 500 non-fatal
accidents per annum. It is expected to reduce journey times by 50-75 per
cent.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Kences1" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/kences1?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to