Govt may repeal Warehousing Corporations Act, 1962, paving way for its disinvestment bl-premium-article-image

Prabhudatta Mishra Updated - April 11, 2024 at 08:11 PM.

However, the process may be complicated as CWC holds 50% stake in 19 State warehousing corporations

The Central Warehousing Corporation (CWC), a Schedule ‘A’ Mini Ratna company, may be corporatised on the lines of Indian Airlines before it is divested or privatised after repealing the Warehousing Corporations Act, 1962. The CWC was constituted under the Act. However, the disinvestment may be complicated since CWC holds 50 per cent stake each in 19 State Warehousing Corporations (SWCs), which were also set up under the same law.

The approval of Cabinet for the repeal of the Warehousing Corporations Act, 1962, is likely to be placed soon after elections, sources said. Meanwhile, there is no full time Managing Director since November 2022 and Amit Kumar, Director (Marketing and Corporate Planning), is officiating as MD.

Currently, the Union government holds 55 per cent equity shares while State Bank of India holds nearly 22 per cent and other commercial banks hold 16 per cent. Public sector insurance companies also hold 7 per cent share in CWC.

Under the current law, State governments cannot return the 50 per cent equity of CWC in the SWCs, sources said. But once the law is repealed, they may get freedom to return the equity to the Centre and manage the SWCs on their own. However, there could be issue while returning the equity with regard to calculating its value.

Most are profitable

“As long as CWC is with the government, the States are comfortable as the Centre does not interfere in the activities of SWCs despite having 50 per cent stake. Due to this model followed for last several years, 17 out 19 SWCs are profitable,” said a former CWC official. However, there could be issue if CWC is privatised as any private company would like to protect its investment in SWCs, the official added.

During FY 2022-23, CWC reported a turnover of  ₹2,104.51 crore against  ₹2,232.20 crore in the previous year. It operated 458 warehouses, including 23 Custom Bonded warehouses, 21 CFSs/DPEs/ICDs and 3 Private Freight Terminals, with a total storage capacity of 100.87 lakh tonnes (excluding management capacity), according to its 2022-23 annual report. The average capacity utilization during the year was nearly 87 per cent.

India’s warehousing market size is expected to rise to  ₹2,27,100 crore by 2028 from  ₹1,24,800 crore in 2022, with a growth rate of 11.5 per cent (CAGR) during 2023-28, industry estimates show.

Published on April 11, 2024 14:41

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