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Energy
and Power
Investment in power must
be accelerated urgently. Any further delay in adding new
capacity will inflict considerable costs on the economy.
- The Government will ensure
that all eight "fast track" projects start construction
in 1998.
- Transmission and distribution
need to be strengthened. To ensure that private investors
in this sub-sector do not have the same experience as
their counterparts in generation, the Government will
create a standardized application procedure with clear
and transparent rules for their entry;
- The Government will strive
for a national consensus to ensure that, in five years,
a commercially viable power tariff structure comes into
operation;
- BHEL will be revitalized
to expand its capacity to emerge as a global player
in the next five years;
- The Government will review
the liquid fuel policy and institute a more efficient
and fair policy regime;
- Large-scale research and
development will be instituted to develop more non-conventional
energy;
- Other things being equal,
preference will be given to Indian companies in power
generation and distribution;
- The long-stalled nuclear
power programme will be restarted. India has mastered
the technology and the entire nuclear fuel cycle. Only
two nuclear plants have gone critical in the last seven
years. Instead of importing nuclear power technology
from Russia, there is no reason why our trained engineers
should not be exporting Indian nuclear power technology
to foreign countries;
- In the oil sector, the
Government will involve the Indian private sector in
oil extraction and refining on the explored oil fields
and will, on viable terms, allow Indian joint ventures
with foreign companies in oil exploration and extraction;
- In the coal sector, the
Government will increase the production of coal, reduce
costs and raise productivity. It will involve the Indian
private sector in coal mining so as to meet the increased
energy needs of the country.
Railways
- Private participation
in using such idle railway tracks will be allowed;
- An efficiency audit of
the Railways will have to be done to prevent wastage
and disuse of stores and rolling stock;
- Also, a study should be
done to ensure that trains carry payloads up to 4,000
tonnes;
- We will institute research
and development for the Indian Railways suited to Indian
conditions;
- Container transport will
be encouraged on a point-to-point basis;
- The Railways will also
run pilgrimage specials connecting the several places
of pilgrimage in the country both from a commercial
point of view and service to the pilgrims, as well as
from the standpoint of national integration.
Roads
and Bridges
- The National Highways
Authority of India will be made the regulator for this
sector. It will be responsible for setting tolls, inviting
bids from private companies, evaluating them and awarding
them. The BJP will continue with the current fiscal
incentives for this sector. Like in other sectors, it
will identify the non-fiscal barriers to investment
in this sector, for their speedy removal;
- The Government will identify
the four most heavily used stretches of the national
highway system. It will formulate and implement an action
plan to upgrade them within two years using both the
public and private sectors wherever necessary.
- For all other highways,
the Government will invite the private sector to upgrade
them, for which they will collect toll revenues. If
the private sector is not interested, the Government
will create a State-owned National Highway Development
Corporation that will go ahead and upgrade these highways,
for which it will also levy tolls;
- A proportion of the taxes
on motor vehicles and on petrol and diesel collected
in each city will be handed over to that city or town
to use to upgrade the roads in those cities; and,
- Except for very long distance
and high investment projects, the policy will be to
involve only the Indian private sector in the bids.
Sea Ports
Most Indian ports are operating
at more than 100 per cent capacity. Yet they are very
inefficient when compared to other parts in the region.
As part of a proper port development programme, the BJP
will do the following things:
- Convert ports into companies
that can raise funds from the debt and equity markets.
The initial shareholding of this company can be divided
four ways with the central Government, the State Government,
the city administration and the general public;
- Ports will be encouraged
to invest in the latest information technology and cargo
handling equipment to reduce turnaround time;
- The workers of ports should
be retrained to use these new technologies. Ports must
be more efficient, but they need to become so without
displacing too many workers;
- Develop Mumbai and Vishakhapatnam
ports as megaports, which will be warehouses for the
country on either seaboard;
- Private sector minor ports
should be encouraged. They will take the load of the
bigger ports;
- Except for large international
ports, in other cases, preference will be given to Indian
companies.
Telecommunications
The aim of our telecom policy
will be to:
- Increase the number of
phone lines dramatically, especially in villages;
- Satisfy the more demanding
audio, video and data communications needs of business
and homes.
For these purposes, the BJP
Government will take the following steps:
- The Indian Telegraph Act,
1885 will be replaced with new legislation that takes
into account the advances in the last century and more
and reflects the current and future status of the telecom
sector;
- The Government's role
will be that of a regulator, so the Telecom Regulatory
Authority of India will be strengthened;
- The department of telecom
will be converted into a company called India Telecom.
To expedite the shift from a Government department to
a profit-making company, the Government will divest
a portion of its shareholdings in India Telecom at the
appropriate time;
- The Government will not
discriminate between Government-owned companies or the
new private companies coming into operation. All restrictions
(inter-circle, long-distance, international) will be
removed on schedule, or earlier, in the interests of
greater competition;
- However, the Government
will maximize the returns from the companies that it
already owns (India Telecom, VSNL, MTNL, ITI). To make
these telecom companies competitive, they will be given
freedom to hire the best people and pay them market
salaries;
- Since India is expected
to have the sixth-largest number of phones in the world
in the next few years, it must have a telecom-manufacturing
industry to match this. The Government will encourage
the creation of world-class telecom-manufacturing in
India, that is encouraged to use indigenously developed
technology;
- The Government policy
for foreign direct investment will discourage foreign
majority holdings in telecommunication companies.
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