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Chinese, Korean majors vie to build India’s longest road bridge

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China’s secondlargest construction company is competing with at least six international builders, including two each from Japan and Korea, for $2.7 billion worth of contracts to build the largest road bridge in India. The 22kilometer Mumbai Trans Harbor Link has attracted bids from China Railway Major Bridge Engineering Group Co. Ltd., Japan’s IHI Infrastructure System Co. Ltd., and Korea’s Daewoo Engineering & Construction Co. and SK Engineering & Construction Co. Ltd. among others, according to U.P.S. Madan, the chief of the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority. The global construction majors have bid in partnership with Indian companies including Larsen & Toubro Ltd. and the Shapoorji Pallonji Group, he said. The project, which aims to shrink traveling time between the island city and its mainland suburbs, was first conceived about 40 years ago, according to Madan, but then delayed for various reasons. It is an integral piece of the plan to develop transport links in India’s financial capital where congestion often leaves the 20 million people that live in and around Mumbai in hourslong traffic jams and makes light of the city’s dream of rivaling Shanghai as a business center. “Fortunately, it has come to a stage where now it is going to take off,” Madan said. The project will bring economic development to the so far underdeveloped eastern suburbs of Mumbai and reduce the load on infrastructure in other parts, he said. Prime Minister Narendra Modi laid the foundation stone for the transharbor link in December. The bridge will also offer connectivity to a new airport planned in Navi Mumbai district and to the manufacturing hub of Pune. On completion, it will be the longest road and sea bridge in India.
“Mumbai has not been able to grow in every direction, the growth has mainly been in the South and North,” said Jaijit Bhattacharya, partner, infrastructure & government, KPMG India. “The linkage will spread growth to the mainland, decongest heavy Mumbai traffic, cut travel time." This is one of the country’s largest projects to garner so much interest from international companies, he said.
The transharbor link will cost about 178 billion rupees ($2.7 billion), with nearly 85 percent of that coming from the Japan International Cooperation Agency as a soft loan to be repaid over 30 years, Madan said. He expects tenders to be finalized in April and work to begin this year given all the regulatory approvals have been received. The agency plans to complete construction by 2021. China Railway Major Bridge Engineering Group is a subsidiary of China Railway Group Ltd., the world’s secondlargest infrastructure builder. Since two phases of the transharbor link go over the sea, the MMRDA has laid out strict criteria for those portions of the bridge, with Indian companies needing to tie up with more experienced and technologicallyadvanced foreign peers to qualify. India this year announced record spending of 3.96 trillion rupees to build and modernize its railways, airports and roads as Prime Minister Modi aims to upgrade the strained infrastructure in Asia’s thirdlargest economy.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...-longest-road-bridge/articleshow/57806916.cms
 
For complex infra technical help should be taken from experienced contractors.
Their is no ego in critical infra.
For eg china till now takes help from western cos for its complex infra incl high rise buildings. Nothing wrong in it at all.
 
Well you can't really hold up Bandra worli sea link as an example because significant foreign know how was required to get it completed.
Everyone needs knowhow initially, that's true. Even now we are not on equal level footing with many countries. But that doesn't mean we don't have the will or capacity to do big projects. Quoted link was posted for some trolls who can go through that and check that it was Indian organization which built the Bandra Worli sea link. Also it gave the opportunity to go through the project again. Thank you.
 
For complex infra technical help should be taken from experienced contractors.
Their is no ego in critical infra.
For eg china till now takes help from western cos for its complex infra incl high rise buildings. Nothing wrong in it at all.


When did I say anything is wrong at all.

It is totally true that one needs support.

What I'm just remarking is the fact that India still needs significant input for any major infra project.

And you are comparing China. China today is perhaps the most advanced in some domains of infra.

A lot of help is actually on architecture not engineering.
 
When did I say anything is wrong at all.

It is totally true that one needs support.

What I'm just remarking is the fact that India still needs significant input for any major infra project.

And you are comparing China. China today is perhaps the most advanced in some domains of infra.

A lot of help is actually on architecture not engineering.
Have u actually worked with them ? I have.
Each of their " achievements" are actually total copies of western tech with minor changes.Even they dont use local brands for critical tech .
 
Hope Korea or Japanese firm win. Chinese wasting your time trying to get contracts over there
 
Hope Korea or Japanese firm win. Chinese wasting your time trying to get contracts over there
Even we prefer Japanese or koreans over chinese because of quality.
We had a bad experience with the leaky trains bought for the mumbai metro from china. Became a big joke in India.
 
Ontopic .. Mumbai really is the s...ts when it comes to infrastructure.
Every project their is first a political than a environmental football their.
While Delhi has built nearly 300 km of metro in the last 18 yrs , Mumbai managed 11 km running length till now. And it looks quite shabby in construction in comparison.
Only good infra Mumbai has built is the sealink which also gets choked at its exit.
Useless services like monorail etc are running which hardly make a dent in the load.
Mumbai deserves much better and decisive planners.
 
Even we prefer Japanese or koreans over chinese because of quality.
We had a bad experience with the leaky trains bought for the mumbai metro from china. Became a big joke in India.
Sure Guynextdoor2. Is this your other account? :lol:
 
Sure Guynextdoor2. Is this your other account? :lol:

I am not joking. The chinese supplied new trains had water leakages. Big news in India.
 

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