Surat–Chennai Expressway


Surat–Chennai Expressway is an under-construction, long, 6-lane access-controlled expressway, which will connect the second largest city of Gujarat, Surat, with the capital of Tamil Nadu, Chennai, in India. It will pass through six states: Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. It will be operated and maintained by the National Highways Authority of India, and will reduce both travel time and distance from around 35 hours to around 16 hours, and from approximately to. It is being built at a cost of ₹ 45,000 crore, which was earlier slated at ₹ 50,000 crore. It will be the second longest expressway in India, after the Delhi–Mumbai Expressway.

History

To facilitate socio-economic development, economic growth and trade in India by ensuring faster and better transportation of goods from northern to southern India, the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways planned to build a highway from Surat to Chennai, in 2021, which will help to improve connectivity, industrial activities and trade by creating a direct link, and develop the regions of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and central Maharashtra, which at present lack them altogether as compared to other industrial regions in the country. This will also help to transport goods directly from the national capital to South India via the Delhi–Mumbai Expressway and this expressway. The ministry stated that the project will be built at a cost of ₹ 50,000 crore. In January 2023, the project was approved by the Government of India and included it in the Bharatmala Pariyojana's Phase-II. It will be built at a cost of ₹ 45,000 crore, and the foundation stone for the project was laid by Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the construction of the expressway's Karnataka to Akkalkot section, on the same month. The expressway is expected to be completed by December 2026.

Route

The expressway will start from Surat in Gujarat, pass through six states, districts and their states, and terminate at Chennai, Tamil Nadu.

Gujarat

Maharashtra

Karnataka

Telangana

Andhra Pradesh

Tamil Nadu

Construction

The expressway has been divided into two sections based on the region's topography–Greenfield and Brownfield, as well as economic corridors. The expressway will be built using the Hybrid Annuity Model of construction. The two sections are described in the following:

Surat–Solapur Economic Corridor

The Surat–Nashik–Ahilyanagar–Solapur Economic Corridor is the first part and the northern section of the expressway, which will be fully greenfield, six-lane and access-controlled. It will pass through two states–Maharashtra and Gujarat start from Surat in Gujarat, as the expressway's starting point, and will cover the cities of Nashik, Ahilyanagar and Solapur, until the Maharashtra-Karnataka border. It will be in length, out of which the Surat–Ahilyanagar section will cover and the Ahilyanagar–Solapur–Akkalkot until the Maharashtra-Karnataka border section will cover. This section's Detailed Project Report has been completed by the Hyderabad-based joint venture firm, Aarvee Associates–Nag Infrastructure Engineers and Consultant JV. This section will be built at a cost of ₹ 30,000 crore. Currently, this section is under bidding, design preparation and land acquisition. It has been divided into 14 packages, which are described in the following table:
PackagesChainagesContractorStatus
Package-1TBDTBDPending notice
Package-2TBDTBDPending notice
Package-3TBDTBDPending notice
Package-4Ambegaon to Chehedi Khurd, Nashik districtTBABidding process underway
Package-5Chehedi Khurdh to Kahandalwadi, Nashik districtTBABidding process underway
Package-6TBDTBDPending notice
Package-7TBDTBDPending notice
Package-8TBDTBDPending notice
Package-9TBDTBDPending notice
Package-10TBDTBDPending notice
Package-11TBDTBDPending notice
Package-12TBDTBDPending notice
Package-13TBDTBDPending notice
Package-14Hasapur to Badadal G. R. Infraprojects Ltd.Land acquisition underway

Solapur-Chennai Economic Corridor

The Solapur–Kurnool–Chennai Economic Corridor is the second part and the southern section of the expressway, which will be a mix of greenfield and brownfield sections, six/four-lane and access-controlled. The alignment of this part also lies mostly on the existing National Highway 150C. It will pass through five states–Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. It will be in length, out of which the greenfield section from Akkalkot to Kurnool will cover, while the remaining from Kurnool to Chennai, where it will terminate, will be the brownfield section. This section's Detailed Project Report is underway, and will be built at a cost of ₹ 15,000 crore. Currently, this entire section is under bidding, DPR preparation and land acquisition, except the Karnataka section, for which the construction has been started on the Akkalkot–Yadgir section, since January 2023, into two sections, one with a length of, which is being built by PNC Infratech, and another with a length of, which is being built by Dilip Buildcon Limited. Due to this, these two sections of the expressway will be completed one year before the scheduled deadline of December 2026, i.e., in December 2025. It has been divided into 8 packages, which are described in the following table:

Andhra Pradesh

The bidding process for the remaining stretch until Chennai is underway, as of February 2023.

Benefits

The expressway will benefit the entire country, as follows:
  • Trade: As the expressway will connect North and South India, it will result in a high increase in transportation of goods and people, thus resulting in growth in exports, reducing dependency on imports, as well as industrial activities and accelerating economic development.
  • Tourism: It will facilitate tourism by promoting it in western parts of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, central Maharashtra and along the Western Ghats, well known for its environment, thus resulting in the development of local economies.
  • Connectivity: The expressway will create a direct connection between North and South India, resulting in faster, safer and better commute, by avoiding the existing congested routes via Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune and Mumbai, as well as reducing travel time and distance considerably, from around 35 hours to around 16 hours, and from approx. 1,570 km to 1,271 km.
  • Protection of the environment: To ensure the protection of green cover, trees and plants will be planted along and between the route of the expressway.
  • Employment: Due to increase in industrial activities along the expressway's route, various agricultural and industrial initiatives will help the states' as well as the nation economy and growth. The establishment of these numerous centres will result in multiple job possibilities for thousands of people living in both the states, and will result in immense socio-economic development.

Environmental concerns

In July 2022, in a meeting of the Expert Appraisal Committee of the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change, the EAC raised concerns on the alignment of the northern part of the expressway from Surat to Ahilyanagar, through the Western Ghats region, which is ecologically sensitive, and the project could result in a serious harm to the region's environment due to deforestation and soil erosion, as well as pollution. So, the EAC recommended the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways to change the expressway's alignment by avoiding the Ghats section. However, the MoRTH and the National Highways Authority of India gave an appeal to the EAC to negotiate the issue and requested to give way to the project, as the design preparation, packages and their bidding process and the Detailed Project Report of the entire northern section of the expressway, including the Ghats section, are underway, and if changed the alignment, it may reduce the impact and benefits of the expressway on the places through which it will pass. The NHAI said that the construction procedure will be using in that section to minimize any environmental damage, as much as possible.

Status updates