Telangana - Kaleshwaram Project is a Big Fraud
Later, during a news conference, telangana Pradesh congress Committee (TPCC) vice president G Niranjan said that despite the recent collapse of the Medigadda barrage, the then-chief minister Chandrashekar Rao-led BRS government did nothing. He stated that the individuals in charge of the collapse had prioritized contractor interests above Telangana's. "All these contractors should be blacklisted and if they have been entrusted with other tasks in the State, they should be avoided," Niranjan said in a statement.
The BCR was anticipated at 1.51 in the 2017 detailed project report (DPR) for the re-engineered kaleshwaram project, which was authorized by the Central Water Commission in june 2018. The CAG audit examination in 2022 revealed that the BCR was overstated by underestimating yearly expenditures and overestimating annual profits from the project.
According to a recent CAG audit report, the project's BCR is just 0.52, after accounting for yearly expenditures such as capital interest, operation and maintenance costs, power consumption costs, and depreciation on civil works, pumps/motors, and pipes.
In 2007, the Pranahita-Chevella Sujala Sravanti (PCSS) project cost ₹38,500 crore and sought to provide irrigation for 1.64 million acres. After the project was renamed kaleshwaram, the goal was to build a new command area of 18.25 million acres while stabilizing another 470,000 acres. The project cost increased to ₹85,596.58 crore.
The CAG audit stated that the previous administration used huge borrowings to complete the kaleshwaram project. In august 2016, it established kaleshwaram Irrigation Project Corporation Limited (KIPCL), a special purpose organization to raise financing for the kaleshwaram project.
As of march 2022, KIPCL had negotiated 15 credit agreements with banks and other financial organizations for an overall loan value of ₹87,449.15 crore. This included a sum of ₹11.220.22 crore for interest during construction, which would be added to the principal amount of the loan. These loans feature interest rates ranging from 7.8% to 10.9%.
The state government would need ₹14,462 crore annually to service the debt for the kaleshwaram project. Additionally, cash would be needed for operational expenditures, including ₹10,374 crore for energy consumption and ₹272 crore for the operation and maintenance of elevators.
If the government is to carry this load, it must provide significant expenditures to the irrigation sector in its yearly budget.
Over the past six years, the kaleshwaram project has received budget allocations ranging from ₹1,382 crore to ₹5,072 crore. Over the last six years, the project received a total allocation of ₹27,137 crore, with just ₹18,659 crore expended. So, even the budgeted money was not used," the CAG stated.