GE,
Alstom land $5.6 billion deals to supply Indian railway
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[November 10, 2015]
By Tommy Wilkes
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - General Electric and
Alstom have won contracts worth a combined $5.6 billion to supply
India's railways with new locomotives, as the vast but dilapidated
state-owned network looks to foreign companies to help it modernise.
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France's Alstom has been picked to supply 800 electric locomotives
and will also build a factory in the eastern state of Bihar,
railways spokesman Anil Saxena told Reuters on Tuesday. The total
value of the contract and the new factory is about 200 billion
rupees ($3 billion), he said.
GE will meanwhile provide the railways with 1,000 diesel locomotives
over the next 11 years, as well as investing $200 million in a plant
and maintenance sheds, in a deal worth $2.6 billion that is the U.S.
company's biggest in India.
The contracts are two of the first and the largest to be awarded to
foreign firms since India last year allowed 100 percent foreign
direct investment in certain parts of its railways, and comes as New
Delhi embarks on a huge modernisation programme to overhaul the
world's fourth-largest train network.
"In most of our growth markets, localisation is typically a key part
of any infrastructure deal we do," Jamie Miller, chief executive
officer of GE Transportation, told Reuters on Monday.
GE and Alstom won against competition from rival manufacturers such
as Canada's Bombardier Inc <BBDb.TO> and Germany's Siemens <SIEGn.DE>.
Keen to upgrade the country's creaking infrastructure, Prime
Minister Narendra Modi's government has said it will invest $137
billion on its railways by 2020.
It has also opened up limited parts of the state-owned network to
private and foreign investment, luring manufacturers hungry for
contracts.
"It will bring this technology to a market that needs it. For them,
this is really aligned with 'Make in India,' " GE's Miller said.
India's railways is a lifeline for the more than 23 million people
who use it every day. It also offers some of the world's cheapest
fares to help poor people travel across the country.
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But the system largely dates back to the British colonial era and
India has struggled to generate money to invest and modernise,
leaving an ageing and congested network where trains run at an
average speed of just 50 kilometres (31 miles) per hour.
GE said the company had received a letter of award from India, and
it would now sign a formal agreement before beginning construction
of the new factory.
The factories will be built through a public-private partnership
model and structured as joint ventures with Indian Railways, which
will own stakes in the plants.
Alstom and its Indian subsidiary were not immediately available for
comment.
(Reporting by Tommy Wilkes; Additional reporting by Katie Reilly in
New York; Editing by Grant McCool and Stephen Coates)
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