New Delhi: The construction of Subarnarekha port in Odisha will begin soon as the Defence Ministry has given its clearance for the project, Odisha government said Tuesday.
Chennai-based Creative Port Private Ltd (CPPL) has proposed construction of an all-weather deep-draft commercial port at Subarnarekha river, the state government said in a statement released here.
Steel giant Tata Steel has signed an agreement with the Chennai firm to pick up 51 per cent equity in the port project from the original promoters, it said.
“Ministry of Defence has given the nod for construction of a port on Subarnarekha river mouth on the Bay of Bengal in Balasore district. Decks have been cleared for the project and the construction will start shortly,” the statement said.
The proposed port project is located close to the integrated test range site of the Defence Ministry at Chandipur near Balasore. Earlier, the ministry had certain objections to the project, it added.
The land acquisition for the project is already over. The state government had handed over 692.68 acre to the port developers.
Port-based industrialisation is a major thrust area for the state with three ports already operational at Paradip, Dhamra and Gopalpur.
This port will spur faster economic development of northern Odisha, Sanjeev Chopra, Principal Secretary, Industries Department, Odisha government, said.
“Though 961.18 acre of land is required for the port, the government has allotted 692.68 acre to the developers as about 128.8 acres of government land remains encroached. The Balasore collector has been asked to evict the encroachers,” the state government said.
CPPL had signed an MoU with the Odisha government December 18, 2006 to develop the project. Later, the revenue sharing agreement was inked between the two sides on January 11, 2008, it said.
“The Union Ministry of Environment and forests had accorded environment clearance to the proposed port project in 2012, but it hit a roadblock with the Defence Ministry raising objections. However, this hurdle is over with the defence ministry giving conditional clearance,” the statement said.
According to the revenue-sharing agreement signed originally, the port would have an initial capacity of 10 million tonnes per annum (MTPA), which is to be raised to 40 MTPA over 10 years, it added.
Losing To Win
I t may appear strange in most democracies, including India, that losing a no-confidence vote against a government leading to...
Read more