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30 Jun 2009
A Shipping Ministry committee might submit its recommendations soon on a revised land use policy for major ports.
The policy is expected to remove several ambiguities in the existing land use policy,
which hampers major ports from taking decisions on issues that could improve the capacity and earnings.
Improving efficiency
Major ports are those under the Centre’s jurisdiction. The committee
was set up in January – with officials from the Shipping Ministry and
major port trusts as members - to recommend ways to improve
efficiencies at the ports. The policy may also outline processes for
taking decisions on issues such as leasing beyond 30-year period,
provision of way-leave permissions for laying pipelines, allotting land
on nomination basis for captive use and provision of lease within
custom-bound area for setting up basic facilities.
For instance, on allowing the port authorities to allot land to a
particular player for captive use on a nomination basis, a move to
empower a committee of secretaries from some relevant ministries to
take a decision is being discussed.
“The clarity would help cases like Neyvelli Lignite, which has moved to
set up a captive facility in Tuticorin port,” said an official pointing
out that major ports require the guidelines for a captive policy as
this would help them attract large and dedicated customers.
Captive use policy will allow major port trusts to handover waterfront
or port facilities to a public or private enterprise on nomination
basis without going through a competitive bidding process.
Captive facilities
The Ministry has been attempting to have a policy for captive
facilities in ports since the last few years. “Major port trusts
usually hesitate taking decisions on captive facilities in the absence
of a competitive bidding process, there might be audit-related issues
in the Government set up,” explained an official. At the same time, the
committee may also lay down administrative reforms that the port trusts
should undertake.
“There is a need to computerise the entire land management system on
the part of a port, and make available GIS-based data online for all
stakeholders,” said an official source in the know.
Land on lease
One of the issues under consideration is whether port authorities
should be allowed to provide land on lease basis within the
custom-bound area for over 11 months. Now, structures such as
conveyors, silos, pipelines and temporary transit sheds are required
for sustained use, while a “licence” to do so is given for 11 months
only.
Given the 11-month limit, investors are unwilling to construct these structures.
“In such a backdrop, either the port trust should do away with the
11-month limit or should itself create such structures and recover the
cost through user charges,” said a source.
Another issue under consideration is whether ports should be mandated
to allow way-leave permissions for laying pipelines from jetties to
tank farms in case land is allotted to liquid cargo users.
Source: The Hindu Business Line