Banks over-financed road projects, now crying foul: Secretary

PTI Updated - January 22, 2018 at 11:11 PM.

highway

As the roads and highways sector grapples with a massive problem of funds going bad, the role of banks has come under scrutiny for “happily over-financing” a large number of projects without necessary due diligence and thus creating a ‘scam-like’ situation.

Turning the tables on banks that have been seeking the Government’s help to address high NPAs in this key sector of the economy, a top bureaucrat said lenders were also to be blamed for this problem and there were nearly 70 projects that have got funding at escalated costs.

The remarks assume significance as the highways sector is struggling to roll out stuck projects worth Rs 3.8 lakh crore but the developers in many cases are now shying away.

“How is it that in so many cases they (banks) agreed to such higher amounts of escalated costs... It happened in such a large number of projects that I think scam is one way to define it,” Road Transport and Highways Secretary Vijay Chhibber said in an interview.

“A large number of projects have been over-financed,” he added.

After the steel sector, roads account for the second largest amount of bad loans for the banking sector.

Chhibber said the problem has been further compounded because banks released large amounts upfront to developers who used the money in other sectors without worrying about delays in road projects.

“Even if they were doing this (over-financing) and if roads were built, we would have had no grouse as financing is really their business.

“But in many projects we find that banks agreed to much higher lending and the upfront amount released was so large that right from the first tranche onwards, money was pulled out of the escrow. Then the concessionaires were just not worried about a delay of two or three years as money was handed to them and they used it in some other sectors,” Chhibber said.

A recent Crisil study showed that nearly half of the road projects being constructed under the build, operate and transfer model with a sanctioned debt of Rs 45,900 crore were at a high risk of not being completed.

Referring to this study, Chhibber said the fact is “a lot of bankers would be coming and saying that we need to change our system and our policies as some of them are in distress”.

“But when we analyse what they are saying, we find that the real problem has emerged because of excessive flow of cash in projects beyond the cost assessed,” he added.

“You are going to kill it (the project) on day one because if the concessionaire does not have good intentions, he will pull out his money in the first tranche,” he said.

Published on October 11, 2015 09:54