An Acid Test for Rail Ministry. Will it baulk at the brink?
Train 18/Vande Bharat
express is constantly in news now-a-days, what with PM Narendra Modi ji himself
launching every train. Let us pause and look
back. A
sterling team of brilliant engineers from Chennai’s Integral Coach factory
(ICF) of Indian Railways (IR) and allied railway industry came together with
great synergy and conceptualized Train 18/Vande Bharat express in
2018; subsequently, a near world-class train, designed and manufactured
entirely in India in just 18 months at a fraction of what it would take both in
terms of time and cost anywhere across the globe, was turned out by ICF. This
train caught the imagination of the countrymen because they saw it as a symbol
of resurgent and aspirational India, paving the way for a whole new ballgame in
rail transportation in India. I was the fortunate leader of this team and I
have naturally followed the story of proliferation of this train since then.
After the two
rakes which were turned out in 2019, there was a period of lull and inaction
for nearly three years as venal vilification of the train and the team started. There
is no point in recounting the negativity as we knew all along that
no wrong had been done and no mud would eventually stick. Precious time was wasted due
to these machinations even as the two trains continued giving trouble-free service. Things,
however, changed dramatically since the present Minister of Railways took over
and the vibes today are great. There have been various announcements: by the PM on 15th August, 21 that 75
such trains would ply across the country in 75 weeks and in the budget speech last year by Finance Minister
that 400 Vande Bharat trains would be manufactured in the coming three years.. A common refrain in railway and industrial
circles has been that the government had overreached. I viewed it differently;
it may be a long shot and it may not be possible in the next three years but it
has sent great signals to the country in general and IR and allied industry in
particular. What is important is that there is very
positive agitation and energy towards making more Vande Bharat trains.
Six rakes have been turned out by ICF since August 22. ICF plans to turn
out rakes at the rate of 2 to 3 per month from January 23 onwards. Added to the
enhanced activity at ICF, the Ministry of Railways has shown further resolve
and three huge tenders have been floated for improved Vande Bharat 18 clones
which, if finalized before March 23, should have good deliveries from the year
2025 onwards, with the potential to change the very map of passenger travel in
India.
These tenders shook
the world and practically everyone connected with rail transportation took
notice. Indian railway sector is coming of age. There is a question mark on the
deployment of so many trains as the infrastructure development for 160 kmph
operation is lagging but I tend to support this move for many reasons, viz, 1)
We had built an advanced demonstrative train which was a long time coming but
it is not world-class; to reach world-class inputs from private sector in India
and abroad is definitely called for 2) Assuming that the government has a thought-out
plan for such large-scale deployment of these trains, it would not be possible
without significant induction through participation of other train-builders in
the country 3) Since the tender envisaged involvement of ICF staff in the
process from the beginning, the learnings so acquired would go a long way in
equipping them to deal with more advanced designs.
The technical bid of
the first of these tenders for 200 Sleeper version of VB trains, the biggest
tender ever floated by IR, opened recently with five bidders, viz., Alstom,
Siemens-BEML, Stadler-Medha, BHEL-Titagarh and TMH-RVNL. As the market is
watching the process of evaluation of these bids, negativity and propaganda,
which has been the bane of large tenders of IR for rolling stock, have raised
their heads.
Check out this tweet:
https://twitter.com/RailSamachar/status/1607952208905240576?s=20&t=N0Ek4pZ4IW2jmbmbMrscwg
This periodical,
masquerading as a rail journal, is seeking to attribute motives to the officers
of Electrical department in destroying the careers of officers of Mechanical
department. While some top officers of Electrical department in 2018 and 2019
were certainly responsible for this act, those at the helm today had nothing to
do with it. The fact is that the witch hunt that was perpetrated was rooted in
jealousy, corruption and inaction of top officers of both the departments.
A big irony, a laughable travesty, is that this publication vilified me at the
behest of a top Mechanical officer in 2018 which precisely was the beginning of
the negativity to victimise me, the team and the train and therefore proved
very detrimental in the long term. Today, it shamelessly refers to this
deplorable attempt by some officers to serve its diabolical end with a
smokescreen of championing the cause of victimized Mechanical officers.
It is not proper to
discuss the goings-on in case of a large tender still under deliberation. But
since there is a crooked attempt to raise fallacious objections to the points
raised in letters written by Alstom and Stadler in media, now in public domain
thanks to this tweet, I see merit in clarifying the issue, as per my
understanding, for public consumption. Alstom have informed the Board that
certain bidders have claimed false credentials in respect of design,
manufacture and supply of traction motors; one has included credential which
actually belong to M/s Alstom. The claim of M/s Alstom rings true and logical
because none of these bidders like BHEL, BEML and Titagarh have any experience
in design of traction motors in the specified speed range and therefore it
calls for rejection of the offer of these bidders after due verification.
Accepting their claims on face value would be very counter-productive
and even lead to long law suits. Another aspect highlighted by both of them is
in respect of sanctity of a consortium, which should last with continuous
participation of its members for the contract period of nine years; this would
be severely impacted if one of consortium member of a bidder is acquired by
another bidder in the interim as could very well be the case in case of BEML,
which is on the table for divestment with TMH as one of the likely purchasers
of its ownership. Both Alstom and Stadler have asked for fair evaluation of
these aspects before finalizing the evaluation of technical bids and it is absolutely
in order to raise this issue, particularly as the officers of Railway board
involved must be under tremendous pressure not to eliminate the offers of PSUs,
ignoring whether they qualify on merit or not.
There is another
important aspect of critically examining the track record of the bidders who
have seemingly submitted a competent offer. Two companies involved here have
been awarded with several orders for supply of propulsion systems for EMUs, MEMUs
and even Vande Bharat express. In spite of passage of many years (in some cases
five years), they have delivered exactly nothing. Would assigning this project
to them not be a perfect recipe to let this prestigious and ambitious
initiative dissipate into botched deliveries? Will it not cause sever
embarrassment to IR in the global arena?
It is clear that
there is a wicked attempt to browbeat the officers into dealing the tender with
a false pretence of propriety and transparency and brush off genuine concerns
raised by capable bidders. If these officers fall prey to the malicious
propaganda fearing the nuisance value of some unscrupulous proponents and incompetent
bidders, the image of IR and the country
would suffer an irreparable damage. What emerged as great euphoria promoting IR
as a professional entity on the path to modernize its rolling stock would
degenerate into the familiar story of a well-meaning exercise baulking at the
brink to nothingness.
I neither hold a
brief for any bidder nor do I have an axe to grind. As the creator of the train
and as an independent consultant today, I am well within my rights to call a
spade a spade. All I wish is that the offers get evaluated in an objective
manner in word and spirit of the eligibility criteria and track record of
performance and delivery, in a fair and fearless manner. My advice to Railway
Board for whatever it is worth, I dare say, is that it is now or never. They
must bite the bullet and ensure that IR transcends to the next quantum in
Indian passenger rolling stock business in India.
…
I hope not to worry about achievement.
ReplyDeleteCertainly it will be done in the best interst of the railways and for the benefit of the common man. This government will certainly achieve this .
The delay between 2020 and 2021 etc may be attributed to the pandemic.
"attributed to the pandemic", really? So, we can blame all our malicious, corrupt actions (or inactions) to the pandemic!!
DeleteImpartial & objective analysis.
ReplyDeleteThnx Ranjit Gupta
Thanks sir
DeleteI do hope that the tendering process by the Railways does not get derailed, and the procedure comes to its conclusion of award of contracts, and that to, to the right party who will deliver.
ReplyDeleteYes sir...
DeleteConspiracy against India and corrupt officers with colonial mindset are not able to digest the progress of the country. It is beyond their imagination that India can do such world class projects. More so if imported will create opportunities for commission too. It is well evident that the infrastructure created by Britishers is still working in most cases and what we created is not so good. I am sure Government will surely take care in handling the officers with malicious intentions.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments Mr. Ajay Singh. Do hope things improve...
DeleteRightly said sir.
DeleteRailwhispers Mr.Tripati like person who is called as journalists lobbying for his own works either through private entities or some disgruntled officers who does not get plum posts. Such rail whispers websites should be banned as it is working against nation interest
ReplyDeleteExactly
DeleteMani ji, I have a question regarding the manufacturing of Vande Bharat. How will ICF produce 400 sleeper VB when it's already struggling to meet the goal of normal version of 75 VB before August? Ashwini Vaishnaw told sometime around last year that they are also planning the Vande 3 with 200kmph speed whose tender was supposed to be finalized in Dec 22. I mean does ICF even have the capacity to manufacture so many trains?
ReplyDeleteICF has the capacity but why make so many when tracks with fencing are not ready!! In cany case these 400 have to built by private fellows in Rly premises, the tenders for whcih are either under evaluation or to be be opened...
ReplyDeleteSir i there are 3 problems in vande bharat
ReplyDeleteNo level boarding
Too many seats in economic class
I can understand these problems , it's because of fund constraints
Third problem and most important
Infra Upgradation before running VB express
Due to corrupted officials we can't do it
Atleast do it slowly to make commutes faster