Privatization of trains: Indian Railways chasing its own tail?
Assuming that the entire exercise by Indian Railways (IR) is not about, first boiling the ocean and then blamestorming, but hopefully more like doing nothing by halves, certain sine qua non must be spelt out. This is the aim of this blog.
The RFQs (Requests for Qualification) were received on
October 7th, 2020 and the shortlists should be announced sometime this month. Since financials are the main eligibility criterion with prequalification
broadly predicated on financial capacity of the net worth of 50% of the
indicative project cost of a cluster. A majority of the bids should be found to be eligible in the ongoing
evaluation exercise, the successful ones will be issued with an RFP (Request for Proposal)
and concessions for 35 years would be awarded based on the share of gross
revenue offered. So far so good.
I was intrigued to go through the following news item in Indian Express:
The successful concessionaire, the Private Train Operators
(PTOs), to operate passenger trains would need to deposit
a security amount equal to 3 per cent of the project cost with Indian Railways
(IR). The news item further said that to ensure safe operations of private
trains, IR officials will carry out the same pre-departure inspections as the
ones for IR’s own run trains. Both the decisions were reportedly taken at a
meeting of the government’s Public Private Partnership Appraisal Committee
(PPPAC) with NITI Aayog and IR officials to sort out the multiple imponderables
and roadblocks to facilitate smooth operation of the hundred odd private
trains.
The second issue first. IR would need to carry out safety inspections
and certification of PTO’s trains is absolutely logical and the issue was not flagged
as a point of contention by any of the prospective bidders. Why was it even contended
that the clause could be done away and let PTOs certify a train as safe on
their own? It is unthinkable that safety-certification can be assigned to the PTOs
themselves as that would be like playing with fire. I am not saying that this
certification process is so esoteric that it cannot be done by others. It
simply involves safety of thousands of travellers and no PTO would take the
risk of self-certification as the risk of damages in an accident, particularly
those with casualties, would be too big to take.
The issue that is mystifying is the first one about furnishing a security
deposit. With the projected investments at a level of Rs 30,000 crore for all the
12 clusters in which private trains would be operated, we are talking of an estimated
security deposit of around Rs 1,000 crore. For IR it is neither here nor there
as they are already assured of a model in which they save on interest burden on
investment and depreciation of rolling stock whereas a certain level of
revenue, most likely higher than what they earn today, is assured. It is
understood that NITI Aayog officials felt that the PTOs would anyway be bringing
in huge investment at some risk and this security deposit would be an impediment
to the ease of doing business with Indian Railways. What, however, prevailed in
the meeting was that in the event of a PTO not being able to meet its financial
obligations or provide the services, the government should have some financial
leverage to fall back upon and therefore retention of the security deposit
rider was favoured.
Guarding against such a contingency would logically involve making
business as easy as feasible for a win-win situation and not make it harder for
the first-time investors in railways. It is obvious that the PTOs would be
taking the main and many allied risks and a security deposit may be just
another comfort for IR but a major dampener for the prospective investors. Why
do I keep getting the feeling that the whole exercise of privatization of train
operation is being handled in a manner of an auction of a goldmine, presupposing
that it would be windfall for the PTOs? There has been weak regard, at least so
far, for the red flags raised by the bidders whereas new provisions are
invented to safeguard the make-believe interests of IR. While the greatest
interest of IR should be that this novel initiative should succeed, the
actions, or inactions, suggest that IR believes that the exercise is already a
big success with a long list of bidders queuing up and so they must ensure that
the bidders do not land a bonanza. Glimpses of the magical Water of India
but only if the chimeral golden goose actually existed without the
disaster that followed.
There may be fifteen entities in the fray but many
appear to be there just to have their hat in the ring; purchase of RFQ
documents and submission was not an expensive proposition. No one with
interests in the field wants to be left out as this indeed is a novel project
with significant ramifications for the future of passenger transport in India. The proof
of the pudding would, however, be in the level of participation at RFP stage
and that too with a competent binding bid.
It doesn’t require
multiple reiterations that as Indians, and indeed as rail-lovers, we all want
this concept of private trains to succeed and enhanced passenger experience in
efficient and competitive manner be achieved. So, let me be the devil’s
advocate today.
A lot of water has flown down the Ganges since extensive
discussions started on the issue of privatization of trains. There are
many imponderables or impediments, which have been talked about, in pre-bid
conferences or otherwise, but did not get a favourable response from IR. Many
of these need to be buried, going forward, as it is time to focus on what would
yield the best bang for the buck, and some of these, inter alia, are:
· Can the
operators use a standard rake in a cluster? The pattern of distances, type of
train, i.e., overnight/day with a killer in case a round trip has both, demography
of clientele etc. determine the optimum configuration of a rake. A big
complication for a PTO.
· Washing and
cleaning of trains, along with inspection and scheduled maintenance facilitated
after 7,000 kilometers and 31 days of the previous schedule or a travel of
40,000 kilometers respectively. This norm is not cleared by IR’s own LHB coaches and therefore it effectively makes
employment of locomotive-hauled trains with LHB type coaches untenable. So, it
is mainly about train sets, or somewhat far-fetched, Talgo type imported
coaches for a locomotive-hauled train. Train 18? The signals are confusing as
IR has tinkered with unnecessary and insipid modifications to the
specification, thereby killing its own much-touted poster baby, a success
story. If train sets are imported, or at least foreign-designed, the investment
level goes up significantly. The world majors of manufacturing are looking only for
derived demands and would hardly like to invest themselves and at best may only
provide incentivized offers. A possibility of modern rolling stock finally
arriving in India through this route, therefore, is not very high.
· The rolling
stock has to be fit for operation at 160 km/h whereas there are clusters which
do not hold the promise of such an infrastructure for a decade or more.
· Significant
reduction in journey time would remain on paper as long as the infrastructure
does not see a matching upgrade, which seems to be the case.
· The haulage charge of Rs 512 per km payable to the IR by the PTOs is
much higher than the actual pro rata expenditure by IR. It may be lower than
the benchmark haulage charge IRCTC pays for its Tejas trains. The
Tejas rakes were invested into by IR, not IRCTC.
· No flexibility for changes in services like frequency
and timings, composition of the train, changes the train services themselves,
including introduction of new services.
· Although dynamic
pricing of fares is permitted, waitlisting of tickets is not permitted, which
can be a hindrance to good occupancy.
· Harsh Key
Performance Indicators, with the one on Punctuality (95% to be guaranteed or a
penalty would be levied on PTO) being a major dampener. Like it or not, those
familiar with punctuality would agree that rolling stock is hardly a reason for
loss of punctuality on IR and that is the only variable in control of a PTO, the
rest like infrastructure and access to it, are totally within the realm of IR.
The damages that a PTO can claim from IR, on the other hand, is loaded in
favour of the latter. This would be a breeding ground for innumerable disputes,
regulator or no regulator.
But as I said, let
these be buried as fait accompli, at least for now, because IR
refuses to look at them and so be it. Let me flag only those issues which,
unless resolved, make it inconceivable that meaningful concession agreements
would emerge:
Independent regulator: With so
many imponderables and potential areas of dispute, it would be implausible to
have IR as a competitor operator, the policymaker, an adjudicator and the regulator,
all rolled into one. This lack of separation will surely lead to unresolved issues,
and frightfully for PTOs, daunting conflicts of interests. Clause 23 of the
draft agreement, however, provides that IR would appoint a consulting engineering
entity, substantially in accordance with the selection criteria set forth in the
document, to be the Independent Engineer. Given the system-caused diffidence
among rail authorities to even to look at genuine concerns of private players, this
type of half-hearted solution cannot and will not work. Privatization of trains
will not take off, let alone succeed unless a genuinely independent regulator
is put in place before the operation starts. Consider the experience in
Electricity sector which had independent sectoral regulators with adjudicatory
roles similar to that of a civil court. In close to two decades of reforms and
independent state and central regulators and multiplicity of players, across
central PSUs like NTPC, NHPC, NPCIL, state GENCOs of each state and a number of
Independent Private Power Producers, all litigations reached the Supreme Court
and high decibel of noise emanated on every issue thereto.
Revenue share: Commercial
viability has been contested by all the serious bidders, in various
ways. A key to success is, indubitably, in a sound financial model, for
the PTOs. So where do the main grouches and grinches lie?
First, lack of clarity about the
demand and capacity with attendant impact on occupancy and revenues. The
information made available to prospective bidder are Project Information
Memorandum (PIM), Draft Concession Agreement (prepared along with Niti Aayog) and
Draft Feasibility Report (DFR) of RITES with M/s Deloitte, which includes
passenger data for the year 2018-19. The DFR brings out the station to station confirmed
and waitlisted passengers and respective earnings
but is hardly comprehensive; the DFR seems to have cherry-picked to make a
strong commercial case. In some sectors the ratio of waitlisted to confirmed
passengers is well below 5%. Moreover, the capacity is likely to undergo a
major transformation in some sectors with the commissioning of Dedicated
Freight Corridors (DFCs) but the possibilities in other sectors are not clear.
Second, the headroom
available to PTOs to charge extra fare is not very wide what with airline
tariffs not too much above the AC II fare; a business case for AC I with
increased fares is even more difficult to envision. Will the passengers really
pay a large premium merely for better amenities and cleanliness in the train
and improved on-board catering, particularly as the travel time would hardly
see a significant reduction? A case for non-AC segment in any case does not
exist as non-AC coaches are not permitted at 160 km/h speed, and even if they
were with actual operation at lower speeds, there is no environment in the
country for this segment to pay higher fares.
Third, it would appear
that this gross revenue share model is a bit of a killer, and that too, over an
extended period of 35 years, with all the uncertainties in revenue and expenses
persisting for the PTOs whereas the haulage charges do not see any correction. Energy
charges and operating costs are somewhat in control of the PTOs but haulage
charge is not. Let us revisit the drivers for the project: IR does not make profit today and the service itself is poor
whereas a PTO would provide better customer experience that IR is
constrained to do, employ cost-effective management, be free of political
compulsions to hold down fares while delivering to IR a revenue higher than
what the latter earns today. So, IR, in any case would sit pretty, providing enhanced
passenger experience and gather added revenues for itself, without any
investments and the attendant interest and depreciation burdens. The least the
PTOs would need are reasonable returns on their massive investments and
workable mitigation of risks.
Lastly, The PPP structure itself invites serious questions. With capital intensity, security deposit stipulation, 10% gross revenue share and such clauses, a lack of understanding or empathy of the higher cost of debt and equity for the PTOs, even for potential consortium of large international manufacturers, operators and funds stand out. The low cost of funds, around 8%, by IRFC as well as IR cannot be matched by any of the PTOs and therefore the PPPs would be burdened by higher asset amortization costs. Further with services not in isolated routes but in direct competition with IR, operational cost efficiencies would remain doubtful. Theis PPP model can hardly rely on a miracle in making wherein all of these high capital and operating costs would be more than offset by a very high fare realization and a Utopian near 100% capacity utilization to meet revenue share and still yield profits for the PTOs.
A gross revenue share
of 10% has been assumed in the DFR projections and it has the making of a
futile long walk. Going by my own back of the envelope calculations and
concerns raised by the bidders about financial viability and given that
IR is averse to the concept of profit-sharing due to apprehensions of manipulations, we have
to tweak the revenue model itself suitably.
One way could be to consider negative
bids such that while IR is relieved of any investments in unpopular sectors, it
shells out some subsidy to the PTO. Another way could be to reconstruct the
revenue component to be shared by reducing the haulage charges from the gross
revenue. Or some other way to make investments more attractive.
Some of these concepts
have been handled in Infrastructure, Highway and Telecom sectors and IR should
not shy away from the learnings made thereto. Inexplicable denial by IR appears
to be standing in the way of the project succeeding and IR cannot be blind to these
harsh realities.
Penalty for good
performance: The agreement would provide that while IR would not have a competing train an hour before and after
a PTO’s train, they are free to do so once 80% occupancy is reached for
three successive months or otherwise after three years. Added to that is the
ambiguity that IR is not disabled to introduce a train from other
origins and destinations in the same city. These are the clauses which
the bidders have looked askance at as they sound like an inverse
reward for success. IR cannot hope to eat the cake and have it too. These clauses
need a relook to encourage occupancy in PTOs’ trains and once they succeed,
they should be given further incentives to free them from the restrictions of
train length and stoppages etc. to exploit the segment better. In any case,
these clauses reinforce the avoidable perils of concessionaire and competitor
being the same.
Leasing option: The culture of leasing rolling stock should be
encouraged. The easiest way, at present, is to work out a sound leasing regime
by IR such that it can lease its own train sets or locomotives. This has been
dealt with cursorily, leaving it to initiatives by PTOs and their financiers. A
good look at this will open up many possibilities for IR to improve passenger
services with either a higher return on investment of reduced investments.
Learning from past experience of DMRC and Container trains will help. IR, moreover,
as the largest aggregator and operator with ownership of underlying
infrastructure would be the ideal counter-party to leverage economies of scale
Adequate time to work
out a competent bid: Bidders would hardly use the DFR data as the bedrock
of their investment decisions. They must institute their own research
into commercials, passenger occupancy and revenue data, sourcing of
rolling stock and so on. I learn from prospective consultants, rolling stock
majors and the bidders themselves that they had not done this so far at any
length as all this while they had been sitting on the fence, waiting for things
to unfold. The date for submission of bids against the RFP is now in January
and it gives them only 2 months to do their study and prepare a bid. That is
unworkable, particularly for those bidders who would submit bids for multiple
sectors; submission of bids in multiple sectors is a sound strategy from the
standpoint of spreading out the risk and also for bringing down the price of rolling
stock with higher volumes. Instead of waiting for the bidders to start whining
about this strongly, IR should revise this to a reasonable time frame for
comfort of the bidders.
In summary, it appears that
there is no risk for IR, except losing face in case of failure of the project
whereas a PTO has to contend with high risks and perhaps even perpetual losses.
At stake is not merely this project but long-term credibility and allure of IR,
both from ease of doing business and long-term PPPs into the future. IR cannot
afford the smug luxury of a premise that it was dispensing favours, not looking
for a partner in success. This privatization project is a very welcome move of
IR to liberate itself from its proverbial stick in the mud and it should not be
allowed to fail due to cocksure rigidity and a fundamentally flawed PPP
architecture. It’s time for IR to open the kimono and meet the prospective
bidders halfway.
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ReplyDeleteUnfortunately IR yet to get out of its current mind set. I (IR) own everything if not I (me the IR) will control everything. I (The IR) does not care for stakeholder's viability or end user's delight. This is no way to run business (if IR wants to call business) or no way to call social service (if they want call service for a social cause). IR is not only going behind its own tail, it also bites its tail. The current CEO probably on his own trip does not appear to show any business prudence.
ReplyDeleteWell said
DeleteVery comprehensive coverage.The whole things seems like an exercise in futility. I agree when you say - while IR faces no risk except loss of face but the PTO has to bear all the risks leading to likely perpetual loss.
ReplyDeleteWhen will Railway men change their mind set ? Why must all proposals be made as if IR is doing the bidder a favor by giving him an opportunity to work with Railways ? Well, the response at the RFP stage will speak for itself.
Yes, we wait and see though I am not very hopeful of any constructive action
ReplyDeleteA challenging and ambitious project. IR must experiment to create this new business model to augment the existing enormous system.Good luck IR.
ReplyDeleteYes..thanks
ReplyDelete