Skip to main content

"Failure" to fix concept of transportation main reason for delay in implementing Ahmedabad metro

By A Representative
Indecision about the very concept of when, how and why the metro project in Ahmedabad should be implemented has been the main reason for delay in its implementation, said a top state official associated with the project. Well-placed sources in the Gujarat government have told Counterview that, if till August 2013, the concept of metro was transport-led development, "it has changed now.”
“The new concept is to develop metro in those areas where it can get traffic, as against the thinking earlier that metro would be developed in those areas where Ahmedabad should actually develop, towards Gandhinagar”, a senior official said, adding, “A presentation was made to the Gujarat chief minister suggesting how metro should lead to Ahmedabad expanding towards Gandhinagar from two directions – Gift City, on one hand, and along the SG Highway, on the other.”
In fact, the CM had also approved the idea of taking the metro towards south of Ahmedabad, too -- towards Dholera, where a modern city in the form of special investment region (SIR) is proposed to developed as part of the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor. It was to be extended up to the proposed Greenfield international airport, just outside the SIR. The view was, once metro route was finalised towards Dholera, urbanisation would automatically develop in that direction.
During the presentation, which provided a scenario of development of Ahmedabad till 2050, it was suggested that the concept of transport-led development alone had led to the planned expansion of Navi Mumbai, and it was an "international practice" to do it that way. “It was suggested to the CM that a transport policy which helped horizontal growth of urban areas should be adopted. Modi was agreeable to the concept, and gave a go ahead to it.”
However, in a “remarkable piece of indecision”, officials of the state urban development department “dropped the idea transport-level development, and replaced it with the traditional concept of developing transport only where there is heavy concentration of population.” The result is, “the route has been changed. It is no more metro between Ahmedabad and Gandhinagar. In fact, Gandhinagar is out of the metro. It will be tube railway that will run underground in the entire length and breadth of the city.”
The official said, “With the new change in concept, the work already done – finalization of the route up to Gandhinagar, based on which financial closure for the metro project’s first phase was finalized – would have to redone. The new route would require fresh techno-economic study and soil testing, and the government would again have to go to more than half-a-dozen banks which had allowed financial closure. If till now Rs 300 crore has been spent for all this, an equal amount would have to spent afresh, coupled with delay.”
Meanwhile, latest estimates suggest that the cost of the metro rail project would be much higher than the estimate of Rs 22,800 crore, as envisaged in the detailed project report. This is because, the sources said, after toying with the idea of running most of the metro overground, the Gujarat government has found that it is not feasible, and about 60 per cent of the metro should run underground and there would no link with Gandhinagar in the immediate future. Earlier, only a small corridor of about 16 km was to be part of the 80 kilometres route of the metro.
The change in the route, significantly, would add to the nine-year delay in the metro project. Initially, the delay took place because the state government decided in favour of the BRTS project instead of the metro in 2004-05. In fact, the state government dropped metro like a hot potato, and realized that the delay has cost the state dearly, as several other states have already got their metro projects cleared from the Government of India, and have even got money for themselves.
According to officials, "A minister's committee recently rejected the earlier plan suggested by the Metro Link Express for Gandhinagar and Ahmedabad (MEGA) Company Limited. The construction, which was earlier to link Ahmedabad with Gandhinagar, the state Capital, may now start in the old city area first." Significantly, only six months back, the officials were saying that the old city would have very little of metro, as it did not fit into the concept of transport-led growth!
"Change in the concept has led to change in emphasis, too.The underground rail network will be first taken up, spanning into two old city directions: APMC (Vasna)-Paldi-Jamalpur-Kalpur to Civil Hospital, and Memco (Naroda) to AEC (Sabarmati). These routes have accorded the highest priority now. Considering the dense population of these localities, digging the underground tunnel will be challenging task. Almost 60 per cent of the rail length will be underground now,'' officials said.

Comments

Mellissa said…
Although, I have heard a lot about company incorporation, but I would like to read more on limited company formation procedure personally to get a better insight about it.

TRENDING

Covishield controversy: How India ignored a warning voice during the pandemic

Dr Amitav Banerjee, MD *  It is a matter of pride for us that a person of Indian origin, presently Director of National Institute of Health, USA, is poised to take over one of the most powerful roles in public health. Professor Jay Bhattacharya, an Indian origin physician and a health economist, from Stanford University, USA, will be assuming the appointment of acting head of the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), USA. Bhattacharya would be leading two apex institutions in the field of public health which not only shape American health policies but act as bellwether globally.

Growth without justice: The politics of wealth and the economics of hunger

By Vikas Meshram*  In modern history, few periods have displayed such a grotesque and contradictory picture of wealth as the present. On one side, a handful of individuals accumulate in a single year more wealth than the annual income of entire nations. On the other, nearly every fourth person in the world goes to bed hungry or half-fed.

When a lake becomes real estate: The mismanagement of Hyderabad’s waterbodies

By Dr Mansee Bal Bhargava*  Misunderstood, misinterpreted and misguided governance and management of urban lakes in India —illustrated here through Hyderabad —demands urgent attention from Urban Local Bodies (ULBs), the political establishment, the judiciary, the builder–developer lobby, and most importantly, the citizens of Hyderabad. Fundamental misconceptions about urban lakes have shaped policies and practices that systematically misuse, abuse and ultimately erase them—often in the name of urban development.

'Serious violation of international law': US pressure on Mexico to stop oil shipments to Cuba

By Vijay Prashad   In January 2026, US President Donald Trump declared Cuba to be an “unusual and extraordinary threat” to US security—a designation that allows the United States government to use sweeping economic restrictions traditionally reserved for national security adversaries. The US blockade against Cuba began in the 1960s, right after the Cuban Revolution of 1959 but has tightened over the years. Without any mandate from the United Nations Security Council—which permits sanctions under strict conditions—the United States has operated an illegal, unilateral blockade that tries to force countries from around the world to stop doing basic commerce with Cuba. The new restrictions focus on oil. The United States government has threatened tariffs and sanctions on any country that sells or transports oil to Cuba.

Thali, COVID and academic credibility: All about the 2020 'pseudoscientific' Galgotias paper

By Jag Jivan   The first page image of the paper "Corona Virus Killed by Sound Vibrations Produced by Thali or Ghanti: A Potential Hypothesis" published in the Journal of Molecular Pharmaceuticals and Regulatory Affairs , Vol. 2, Issue 2 (2020), has gone viral on social media in the wake of the controversy surrounding a Chinese robot presented by the Galgotias University as its original product at the just-concluded AI summit in Delhi . The resurfacing of the 2020 publication, authored by  Dharmendra Kumar , Galgotias University, has reignited debate over academic standards and scientific credibility.

When grief becomes grace: Kerala's quiet revolution in organ donation

By Vidya Bhushan Rawat*  Kerala is an important model for understanding India's diversity precisely because the religious and cultural plurality it has witnessed over centuries brought together traditions and good practices from across the world. Kerala had India's first communist government, was the first state where a duly elected government was dismissed, and remains the first state to achieve near-total literacy. It is also a land where Christianity and Islam took root before they spread to Europe and other parts of the world. Kerala has deep historic rationalist and secular traditions.

Bangladesh goes to polls as press freedom concerns surface

By Nava Thakuria*  As Bangladesh heads for its 13th Parliamentary election and a referendum on the July National Charter simultaneously on Thursday (12 February 2026), interim government chief Professor Muhammad Yunus has urged all participating candidates to rise above personal and party interests and prioritize the greater interests of the Muslim-majority nation, regardless of the poll outcomes. 

The Galgotia model: How India is losing the war on knowledge

By Vidya Bhushan Rawat*  Galgotia is the face of 'quality education' as envisioned by those who never considered education a tool for social change or national uplift — and yet this is precisely the model Narendra Modi pursued in Gujarat as Chief Minister. In the mid-eighties, when many of us were growing up, 'Nirma' became one of the most popular advertisements on Doordarshan. Whether the product was any good hardly seemed to matter. 

Beyond the conflict: Experts outline roadmap for humane street dog solutions

By A Representative   In a direct response to the rising polarization surrounding India’s street dog population, a high-level coalition of parliamentarians, legal experts, and civil society leaders gathered in the capital to propose a unified national framework for humane animal management. The emergency deliberations were sparked by a recent Suo Moto judgment that has significantly deepened the divide between animal welfare advocates and those calling for the removal of community dogs, a tension that has recently escalated into reported violence against both animals and their caretakers in states like Telangana.