This Article is From Jun 19, 2020

Efforts On To Use Only Made-In-India Components: Railway Board Chairman

Chairman, Railway Board, VK Yadav said that "they are making efforts to see that the products manufactured by the Railways are exported."

Efforts On To Use Only Made-In-India Components: Railway Board Chairman

Past two-three years, the Railways has taken many steps to reduce import content: CRB (Representational)

New Delhi:

The Railways aims to use only made-in-India components and reduce imports to zero, a top official said on Friday, a day after the transport behemoth decided to cancel the contract of a Chinese firm in a signalling project.

Chairman, Railway Board (CRB), VK Yadav also said during an online media briefing that "we are making efforts to see that the products manufactured by the Railways are exported."

Replying to a question on whether the Railways was considering banning Chinese companies from participating in its infrastructure biddings, Mr Yadav said mostly only domestic players are allowed in railway tenders.

"Mostly we are inviting tenders where only domestic bidders are allowed to participate," he said.

For the past two-three years, the Railways has taken many steps to reduce the import content, the CRB said.

"We have implemented the Make in India policy. For example in our signalling system, the way we have initiated the tender policy, our make-in-India component has become more than 70 per cent."

"Our effort is to ensure that we use more and more made-in-India products and make the import component zero. We are also making efforts to see that the products manufactured in railways are exported," Mr Yadav said.

The Railways on Thursday said that it has decided to terminate the contract of a Chinese company due to "poor progress" on the signalling and telecommunication work on the Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor's 417-km section between Kanpur and Mughalsarai.

The Railways had given the Rs 471 crore contract to the Beijing National Railway Research and Design Institute of Signal and Communication Group in 2016.

They were supposed to complete the work by 2019, but only 20 per cent of the work has been completed so far, the Railways had said.

The move came after 20 Indian soldiers were killed in a fierce clash with Chinese troops in the Galwan Valley in eastern Ladakh early this week, the biggest military confrontation between the two countries in over five decades.

Officials, however, have said the decision to cancel the contract of the Chinese company has nothing to do with ongoing faceoff.

It was poor performance and inability to deliver the project on time that led to the decision by the implementing agency, the Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation Limited (DFCCIL), they have said.

Officials said the DFCCIL has already applied to the World Bank, which is the funding agency, to initiate the process of cancellation.

.