News Letter Subscription
World Economy
US Economy
China Economy
Singapore Economy
Canada Economy
more...
Major Companies
ET 500 Companies
Forbes Companies
Fortune 500 Companies
Insurance Companies
S & P 500 Companies
more...
Indian Economy
Business & Economy
Textile Industry
VAT(Value Added Tax)
Poverty in India
FDI
more...
World Industry
Insurance
Finance
Steel Industry
Oil Industry
more...
Mortgage Industry
US Mortgage
UK Mortgage
China Mortgage
Canada Mortgage
US Economy
US Real Estate
US State Economies
US Banks
US Chambers of Commerce
more...
World Investment
Investment Strategy
Real Estate Investment
Property Investment
Online Investment
more...
Economic Relations
US China
Indo-US
Indo-Japan
more...
Stock Exchanges

Economic Indicators

Type of Economic System

World Country

Nobel Prize

World Organizations

Car Finance

Personal Finance

 
Home >> State Profiles >> Economic Infrastructure

Economic Infrastructure of Chhattisgarh

Economic Profile Economic Infrastructure Universities and Institutes
 

Airports

Raipur aerodrome is the only airport present.


Roads

The road infrastructure of Chhattisgarh, despite these large distances, is in fact better than other parts of the undivided Madhya Pradesh. Chhattisgarh currently has 24.6 kilometers of road for every 100 square kilometers of area whereas the undivided Madhya Pradesh has 22.8 kilometers for every 100 square kilometers of area. In terms of village roads Chhattisgarh has 1.3 kilometers of village roads for every village, compared to 0.92 kilometer for undivided Madhya Pradesh and 0.78 kilometers for the state of Madhya Pradesh.

Power

Strategically located in central India, Chhattisgarh's large surplus of power can be easily transmitted without losses to any of India's four grids. Chhattisgarh is in the chronically deficit western grid, and is linked to the southern and northern grids. A special high- tension line is being laid between Raipur and Rourkela, in the Eastern grid. With its 'Power Hub' strategy, the State will remain power surplus for all times to come. Hence it would be the preferred destination for all power intensive industries.

Korba in Chhattisgarh is really the Power Capital of India. NTPC's Super Thermal Power Plant in Korba is working at 90% Plant Load Factor (PLF), and the plants of the Chhattisgarh State Electricity Board (CSEB) are also highly efficient. There are huge coal reserves in the vicinity, offering cheap pithead power generation opportunities and there is enough water from the State's largest reservoir of Hasdeo Bango. 84% of India's coal is in Chhattisgarh and two other States. There are adequate coal supplies- South Eastern Coalfields Ltd, Bilaspur is doubling its production from 35 million tonnes to 70 million tonnes per annum.

As in the Green Revolution of the past, which concentrated on Punjab and Haryana, the new ‘Power Revolution’ may focus on cheap pithead power producing States like Chhattisgarh, which has the potential to produce upto 50,000 MW of power. On March 3, 2001, in the meeting of Chief Ministers on Power Sector Reforms, the Prime Minister welcomed Chief Minister Ajit Jogi’s offer of Chhattisgarh becoming the Power Hub of India.

This offer is now becoming a reality: NTPC has already started construction on its 2640 MW Sipat Super Thermal Plant and another 600 MW plant in Korba. In response to our invitation, Government of Gujarat is putting up a 500 MW generation plant in Korba. Several other States are also interested. Power will be wheeled to the respective States. Private sector total another 1500 MW, and more projects are in the pipeline.

Chhattisgarh has excellent power evacuation infrastructure. It can transport and sell power to deficit areas in any part of India. CSEB levies minimal wheeling charges. The State has 44% forest cover; even so, Chhattisgarh Environment Protection Board pursues proactive policies so that power generation is environmentally sustainable. An added reason for investing in Chhattisgarh’s power generation sector is our prograssive power policy, that allows third party sales to buyers outside the State, with or without wheeling from CSEB. This also overcomes the usual escrow/guarantee bottleneck.

CSEB is one of few profits making State Electricity Boards. Power Sector Reforms are underway in Chhattisgarh. The user-pays regime has been adopted. There is no free power in the State. Subsidies, where applicable, are targeted. The process of Tariff rationalization is on. A hundred percent Electronic Metering project has been started.

Non conventional energy sources have been accorded very high priority. A special agency called CREDA (Chhattisgarh Renewable Energy Development Agency) has been set up, and over 1200 villages in dense forests are being electrified using off-grid energy. Micro-Hydel power potential is also being tapped in a bring way, and several projects have been identified for viable private investment.

Labour relations are very cordial in the power generating plants, with man- days lost being the lowest in the country. Private sector power generation investors are welcome as Chhattisgarh is inviting investment in greenfield power projects with the cheapest cost of production in the country

Telecom Infrastructure

All districts linked with optical fiber cable and all Tehsils having internet facilities.
Two basic service operators – BSNL and Touchtel.
Two existing Mobile providers – Reliance and Birla AT&T.
Two more Mobile Operators – Airtel and BSNL to commence operations shortly.