JNPT shelves container terminal scheme
By Praveen Chandran | 11 May 2002
Mumbai: The
board of the Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust has deferred
its decision to set up a new container terminal with private
sector participation and may take a re-look at the issue
at its meeting scheduled at the end of May 2002.
JNPT
was to have awarded the container terminal project by
end May 2002 but JNPT workers unions have protested against
the privatisation of the container terminal as also at
the appointment of Ernst & Young (E&Y) as the
financial adviser.
Says JNPT chairman Arun Bongirwar: We havent decided
about the project yet; we will take up the matter for
discussion at the next board meeting scheduled. The board
has decided to go ahead with its plans to appoint E&Y
as consultants for the container terminal privatisation
programme.
JNPT was all set to issue a global tender for the project.
But the port workers came down heavily on the decision
and threatened to bring operations to a standstill if
the privatisation programme continued. Representatives
of the workers unions say they were not against the new
project, but wanted JNPT to operate the terminal without
any external interference.
Pradyumna Kaul, consultant to the JNPT Workers Union,
says E&Y is the financial consultants of P&O Ports
and the Port of Singapore Authority (PSO) in Australia
and Singapore. P&O and PSA are the main aspirants
for JNPTs new container terminal and if E&Y continues
as the financial advisor for JNPT for its privatisation
programme, there will be conflicts of interest while selecting
the final bidder for the container terminal.
Kaul alleges E&Y has falsified figures of the BOT
returns as against JNPTs returns. But E&Y says it
was only 8 per cent more or equal to BOT when, in fact,
it was 30 per cent more in the net present value of the
investment stream.
Kaul also objects to E&Y on the grounds that it announced
during the Anderson merger that E&Y organisations
worldwide were seamless. On the other hand they claim
they are operating independently a far as project consultancy
is concerned.
Says E&Y director Jayesh Desai: As a professionally
managed consultancy firm, we can confirm that there is
no conflict of interest in this issue. E&Y India operates
independently as far as client services are concerned.
Kaul says JNPT had already sold its one container terminal
(Nhava-Sheva International Container Terminal) to P&O.
As a result,
JNPTs net profits had dwindled down from Rs 235 crore
in 1999-2000 to Rs 101 crore in 2000-01. Further, as per
the provisional figures, the net profits for the year
2001-02 stands at Rs 102 crore.
He says the present model licence agreement between JNPT
and P&O, if implemented throughout the country, will
result in forex outflow of $1 billion per annum, which
will translate into further devaluation of the rupee by
4-5 against the US dollar.