In an ambitious plan, the Indian government plans to
build one smart city each at the country's 12 major ports, at an estimated
total investment of Rs. 50,000 crore.
According to Nitin Gadkari, Minister for Road
Transport, Highways, each port will construct one smart city and each city will
be built with an expenditure of about Rs. 3,000-4,000 crore.
"These will be green smart cities. We are
starting work on these in four to six months. You will see all these complete
in five years," he said.
The 12 major ports under central government's
control have between them an estimated 2.64 lakh acres of land which is being
mapped through satellites and are major resources with Shipping Ministry.
Mumbai Port Trust alone has about 753 hectares of
land with it, valued at about Rs. 46,000 crore.
"We are identifying our property through GPS
system. We do not want to sell land to builders and developers. We will develop
these," Gadkari said, adding that companies will be invited to construct
houses there and private investment will be roped in.
Detailing the concept, he said these cities will be
built as per international standards and have wide roads, green energy,
advanced townships and greenery.
In addition, these smart cities and ports will have
e-governance links, international standard facilities, special economic zones,
ship breaking and ship building centres besides allied things, he said.
“Port water will be recycled. Port wastes will be
turned into bio gas. Vehicles will run on bio fuel. Solar energy and wind power
will be generated at ports. These cities will be pollution-free and very green
smart cities. We are starting these," Gadkari said.
Besides, electric vehicles will run here and these
smart cities would house schools, commercial complexes and other amenities, he
added.
The 12 major ports in the country -- Kandla, Mumbai,
KEPT, Marmugao, New Managlore, Cochin, Chennai, Ennore, V O Chidambarnar,
Visakhapatnam, Paradip and Kolkata (including Haldia) -- handle approximately
61 per cent of cargo traffic.
Gadkari said his ministry has plans to encourage
setting up of some bio diesel plants at these ports, including Haldia, where bio
diesel will be made from palm oil residue.
"India imports edible oil worth Rs. 1 lakh
crore annually and maximum oil is imported from Malaysia," he added.
As part of its plan to revamp the country's top 12
ports, the Centre has already asked the ports to prepare land data base and
development plans to achieve international operating standards.
The ports have also been asked to come up with a
shelf of projects to augment their capacity to 1,600 million tonnes from the
present about 800 million tonnes.
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