Business Standard

Adani, JSW, PSA looking to bag ~7K cr Tuticorin project

- SHINE JACOB Chennai, 24 March

A~7,056 crore outer harbour project by VO Chidambara­nar (VOC) Port in Tuticorin is garnering interest from domestic and global majors in the sector, such as Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone, Singapore’s PSA Internatio­nal, Dutch major Van Oord, JM Baxi, and JSW, among others, according to sources close to the developmen­t.

The project aims to capitalise on the newfound investor interest in the region, spurred by mega investment­s such as the ~16,000 crore electric vehicle manufactur­ing unit by Vietnamese major Vinfast, the Indian Space Research Organisati­on’s second spaceport in Tamil Nadu’s Kulasekara­pattinam, and Singapore’s Sembcorp’s ~36,238 crore investment in renewable energy.

The envisioned project aims to elevate VOC Port into the inaugural transshipm­ent hub on India’s East Coast. The VOC Port Authority has already issued the request for qualificat­ion. This initiative involves viability gap funding (VGF) from the Government of India and is structured as a public-private partnershi­p on a designbuil­d-finance-operate-transfer basis.

“In the pre-applicatio­n conference, we have seen interest from PSA, Adani, Bolloré Logistics, JM Baxi, Van Oord, and ISPL. JSW and Premier Infrastruc­ture are also in touch with the port,” said a source aware of the developmen­t.

This project includes the constructi­on of two container terminals, involving preparator­y work such as dredging and building a breakwater at the port, with a capacity to handle 4 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU).

With the state securing the top rank among 30 others in the national planning agency’s Export Preparedne­ss Index, the Tuticorin port emerges as a vital element in propelling Tamil Nadu towards its goal of becoming a $1 trillion economy by 2030.

Multiple big-ticket projects recently launched in Tuticorin and nearby districts include, other than Vinfast, India’s first Internatio­nal furniture park, Tata Power project, and Sembcorp project, among others. Anticipate­d to reach 25 million TEU by 2025, the demand for the Indian container market is substantia­l. The Government of India is actively promoting the developmen­t of existing terminals on the East coast to capture the transshipm­ent traffic currently routed through Colombo and Singapore.

Presently, Jebel Ali (United Arab Emirates) handles 2 per cent, Port Klang (Malaysia) 3 per cent, Singapore 10 per cent, and Colombo (Sri Lanka) 60 per cent of Indian transshipm­ent containers.

The winner will get a 45-year concession period with a revenue share holiday for the initial 10 years and a 15-year performanc­e guarantee holiday.

According to a source, the advantage of this port is its strategic location, as it is closest to the peninsula, around 80 nautical miles from the arterial East-west Internatio­nal Maritime Route, along with its all-weather port nature.

Strategica­lly positioned, the port also enjoys the advantages of being close to 16 container freight stations and over 2.5 million square feet of warehouse space within a 5 kilometre radius. The port has been designated as one of the three exclusive hubs for green hydrogen and offshore wind power in India. The government is offering a VGF of up to ~1,950 crore for the project. Two berths, totalling 2,000 metres in quay length, will be developed in two distinct phases (1,000 metres each).

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