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Bharatmala Pariyojana is a centrally-sponsored project, approved by Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) in 2017.
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Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Road Transport and Highway
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Implementing Agencies: National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), National Highways and Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited (NHIDCL), and State Public Works Department.
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Funding Mechanism: The project will be funded through, Cess collected from Petrol & Diesel (as per Central Road & Infrastructure Fund Act, 2000) ;Toll Tax ;Monetisation of National Highways through TOT (Toll-Operate-Transfer) ;Internal & Extra Budgetary Resources (IEBR) ; Private Sector Investment.
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It was to be completed by 2022.
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Estimated Cost: The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) approved the first phase of Bharatmala Pariyojana with an estimated cost of Rs 5.35 trillion.
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Cost overrun: There was a 100% increase in the estimated cost of the project which was appraised by the Public Investment Board (under Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance) at Rs 10.95 trillion.
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The per km cost of the project increased from Rs 14 crore to Rs 24 crore as per CAG report.
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Time overrun: Till November end, only 76% (24,416km) of the total length of 34,800 km have been awarded with only 42%( 15,045 km) of the project completed.
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Aim: To enhance road connectivity and facilitate economic growth by constructing and upgrading highways across India.
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It emphasized a “corridor-based National Highway development” to ensure infrastructure symmetry and consistent road user experience.
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It aimed to bridge critical infrastructure gaps through development of 34,800 km of National Highways and 26,000 km of Economic Corridors.
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27 Greenfield corridors are planned with an overall length of 9,000+ km.
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Greenfield corridors refer to the development of new infrastructure projects on previously unused or undeveloped land.
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Along with economic corridors, the Golden Quadrilateral (GQ) and North-South and East-West (NS-EW) Corridors will carry a majority of the Freight Traffic on roads.
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It also includes the development of tunnels, bridges, elevated corridors, flyovers, overpasses, interchanges, bypasses, ring roads, etc.
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It will provide the shortest, jam-free, and optimized connectivity to multiple places.
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It will subsume all existing Highway Projects including the flagship National Highways Development Project (NHDP), launched in 1998.