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Transport in India

Transport in India consists of transport by land, water and air. Road transport is the primary mode of transport for most Indian citizens, and India's road transport systems are among the most heavily used in the world.

The Golden Quadrilateral connects the four major metro cities of India, viz., Delhi (north), Kolkata (east), Chennai (south) and Mumbai (west).

India's road network is the second-largest, after the United States and one of the busiest in the world, transporting 8.225 billion passengers and over 980 million tonnes of cargo annually, as of 2015.[1] India's rail network is the fourth largest and second busiest in the world, transporting 8.09 billion passengers and 1.20 billion tonnes of freight annually, as of 2020.[2] Aviation in India is broadly divided into military and civil aviation which is the fastest-growing aviation market in the world (IATA data).[3] India's waterways network, in the form of rivers, canals, backwaters and creeks, is the ninth largest waterway network in the world. Freight transport by waterways is highly under utilised in India with the total cargo moved (in tonne kilometres) by inland waterways being 0.1 percent of the total inland traffic in India.[4] In total, about 21 percent of households have two wheelers whereas 4.70 percent of households in India have cars or vans as per the 2011 census of India.[5][6] The automobile industry in India is currently growing rapidly with an annual production of over 4.6 million vehicles,[7] with an annual growth rate of 10.5%[5] and vehicle volume is expected to rise greatly in the future.[8]

Traditional means of transport edit

Walking edit

Walking was a major transport form in ancient times. People used to cover long distances on foot or bullock carts. For instance, Adi Sankaracharya travelled all over India from Kalady near Kochi.[9] Walking still constitutes an important mode of transport in rural areas.[10] In the city of Mumbai, to further improve the transit conditions for pedestrians, the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority, has commenced the construction of more than 50 skywalks,[11][12] as part of the Mumbai Skywalk project, which is very helpful as walk enthusiasts take part in reducing traffic. The Dakshineswar Skywalk has also come up in West Bengal.

Palanquins edit

 
Royal Palanquin of Mehrangarh Fort

Palanquins, also known as palkis, were one of the luxurious methods used by the rich and noblemen for travelling and also to carry a deity (idol) of a god. Many temples have sculptures of a god being carried in palkis.[13] Modern use of the palanquin is limited to Indian weddings, pilgrimage and carrying idols of gods.[14][15]

Bullock carts edit

 
A bullock cart

Bullock carts were used to be ways of transportation in India, but it can't be seen today due to low speed and safety.[citation needed]

Many years ago, the government banned bullock carts.[citation needed]

Bicycles edit

Bicycles or cycles, have ownership rates ranging from around 30% to 75% at the state level.[6] Along with walking, cycling accounts for 50% to 80% of the commuter trips for those in the informal sector in urban areas.[10] However, recent developments suggest that bicycle riding is quickly becoming popular in Indian cities. In smaller Indian cities, non-motorized transport, which includes cycling, accounts for close to 50% of the total trips by the working-class population. In larger cities like Mumbai, Bengaluru, and Delhi, non-motorized transport accounts for 35%-37% of the total trips[16]. In recent years, government development authorities all over India encourages the setup and use of separate bicycle lanes alongside the roads to combat pollution and ease traffic congestion.[17]

Human-pulled rickshaws edit

 
Human-pulled rickshaws still run in Kolkata

Human-pulled rickshaws are nowadays rarely available in various cities and villages in the country. Many local governments have proposed a ban on these rickshaws describing them as "inhuman". The Government of West Bengal proposed a ban on these rickshaws in 2005.[18] Though a bill aiming to address this issue, termed as Calcutta Hackney Carriage Bill, was passed by the West Bengal Assembly in 2006, it has not yet been implemented.[19] The Government of West Bengal is working on an amendment to this bill to avoid the loopholes that were exposed when the Hand-pulled Rickshaw Owners' Association filed a petition against the bill.[19]

Cycle rickshaw edit

Cycle rickshaws were introduced in India in the 1940s.[20] They are bigger than a tricycle where two people sit on an elevated seat at the back and a person pedals from the front. In the late 2000s, they were banned in several cities for causing traffic congestion.[21][22][23] The Delhi Police recently submitted an affidavit against plying of cycle rickshaws to ease traffic congestion in the city but it was dismissed by the Delhi High Court.[24] In addition, environmentalists have supported the retention of cycle rickshaws as a non-polluting mode of transport.[25]

 
Public buses near Howrah Railway Station in Kolkata, West Bengal
 
Delhi–Meerut Expressway is India's widest expressway with 14 lanes.

Road edit

 
Kathipara Junction, Chennai
 
Bandra-Worli Bridge in Mumbai

As per 2017 estimates, the total road length in India is 5,603,293 km (3,481,725 mi);[26][27] making the Indian road network the second largest road network in the world after the United States. At 0.66 km of highway per square kilometre of land the density of India's highway network is higher than that of the United States (0.65) and far higher than that of China's (0.16) or Brazil's (0.20).[1]

India has a network of National Highways connecting all the major cities and state capitals, forming the economic backbone of the country. As of 2013, India has a total of 66,754 km (41,479 mi) of National Highways, of which 1,205 km (749 mi) are classified as expressways.[28] Although India has large network of four or more lane highways of international quality standards, but without access control (entry/exit control), they are not called as expressways but simply highways.

As per the National Highways Authority of India, about 66% of freight and 82% passenger traffic is carried by the roads. The National Highways carry about 40% of total road traffic, though only about 2% of the road network is covered by these roads.[28] Average growth of the number of vehicles has been around 10.16% per annum over recent years.[28]

India also has many bridges and flyovers in major cities to reduce traffic congestion. Some notable projects include Bandra - Worli Sea link in Mumbai and Kathipara Cloverleaf Interchange in Chennai. India's metropolitan intra-city average traffic vehicle speed in Delhi was 25 km/h (16 mph), in Mumbai 20.7 km/h (12.9 mph), in Chennai 18.9 km/h (11.7 mph) and in Kolkata 19.2 km/h (11.9 mph), as per a study by Ola Cabs in 2017.

Under National Highways Development Project (NHDP), work is under progress to equip national highways with at least four lanes; there is also a plan to convert some stretches of these roads to six lanes.[29] In recent years construction has commenced on a nationwide system of multi-lane highways, including the Golden Quadrilateral connecting four important metropolitan cities of India (Delhi-Kolkata-Chennai-Mumbai) and North-South and East-West Corridors which link the largest cities in India.

In 2000, around 40% of villages in India lacked access to all-weather roads and remained isolated during the monsoon season.[1][30] To improve rural connectivity, Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (Prime Minister's Rural Road Program), a project funded by the Central Government with the help of the World Bank, was launched in 2000 to build all-weather roads to connect all habitations with a population of 500 or above (250 or above for hilly areas).[30][31]

Type of road Length
Expressways 4,027.719 km (2,502.709 mi) as of 2023
National Highways 151,019 km (93,839 mi)
State Highways 186,528 km (115,903 mi)
District and rural roads 5,167,665 km (3,211,038 mi)
Total Length 6,215,797 km (3,862,317 mi) (Approx)

The Trans Harbour bridge is the longest bridge in India. It will be opened on 12 January 2024, after Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurates the bridge. It connects Bombay with Navi Mumbai. [32][33]

Bus edit

 
Mumbai's B.E.S.T. is India's oldest operating transport body

Buses are an important means of public transport in India. Due to this social significance, urban bus transport is often owned and operated by public agencies, and most state governments operate bus services through a state road transport corporation.[34] These corporations have proven extremely useful in connecting villages and towns across the country.[35] Alongside the public companies there are many private bus fleets: As of 2012, there were 131,800 publicly owned buses in India, but 1,544,700 buses owned by private companies.[36]

However, the share of buses is negligible in most Indian cities as compared to personalised vehicles, and two-wheelers and cars account for more than 80 percent of the vehicle population in most large cities.[35]

Bus rapid transit systems edit

 
Ahmedabad BRTS
 
Raipur and Naya Raipur Bus Rapid Transit System
 
A KSRTC Volvo bus. Such buses are common across the country.

Bus rapid transit systems (BRTS), exist in several cities.[37] Buses take up over 90% of public transport in Indian cities,[38] and serve as an important mode of transport. Services are mostly run by state government owned transport corporations.[35] In 1990s, all government state transport corporations have introduced various facilities like low-floor buses for the disabled and air-conditioned buses to attract private car owners to help decongest roads.[39][40]

In 2010, the Ahmedabad Bus Rapid Transit System won the prestigious Sustainable Transport Award from the Transportation Research Board in Washington.[41] Rainbow BRTS in Pune is the first BRTS system in the country. Mumbai introduced air conditioned buses in 1998.[42] Bangalore was the first city in India to introduce Volvo B7RLE intra-city buses in India in January 2005.[43][44][45] Bangalore is the first Indian city to have an air-conditioned bus stop, located near Cubbon Park. It was built by Airtel.[46] The city of Chennai houses one of Asia's largest bus terminus, the Chennai Mofussil Bus Terminus.[47]

Motor vehicles edit

Two-wheelers edit

Motorised two-wheeler vehicles like scooters, motorcycles and mopeds are very popular due to their fuel efficiency and ease of use in congested roads or streets. The number of two-wheelers sold is several times to that of cars. There were 47.5 million powered two-wheelers in India in 2003 compared with just 8.6 million cars.[48]

Manufacture of motorcycles in India started when Royal Enfield began assembly in its plant in Chennai in 1948. Royal Enfield, an iconic brand name in the country, manufactures different variants of the British Bullet motorcycle which is a classic motorcycle that is still in production.[49] Hero MotoCorp (formerly Hero Honda), Honda, Bajaj Auto, Yamaha, TVS Motors and Mahindra 2 Wheelers are the largest two-wheeler companies in terms of market-share.[50]

Manufacture of scooters in India started when Automobile Products of India (API) set up at Mumbai and incorporated in 1949. They began assembling Innocenti-built Lambretta scooters in India.[51] They eventually acquired a licence for the Li150 series model, of which they began full-fledged production from the early 1960s onwards.[citation needed] In 1972, Scooters India Limited (SIL), a state-run enterprise based in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, bought the entire manufacturing rights of the last Innocenti Lambretta model. API has infrastructural facilities at Mumbai, Aurangabad, and Chennai, but has been non-operational since 2002.[citation needed] SIL stopped producing scooters in 1998.[citation needed]

Motorcycles and scooters can be rented in many cities, Wicked Ride, Metro Bikes and many other companies are working with state governments to solve last-mile connectivity problems with mass-transit.[52] Wearing protective headgear is mandatory for both the rider and the pillion-rider in most cities.[53]

Automobiles edit

Private automobiles account for 30% of the total transport demand in urban areas of India. An average of 963 new private vehicles are registered every day in Delhi alone.[54] The number of automobiles produced in India rose from 6.3 million in 2002–2003 to 11 million (11.2 million) in 2008–2009.[55] There is substantial variation among cities and states in terms of dependence on private cars: Bangalore, Chennai, Delhi and Kolkata have 185, 127, 157 and 140 cars per 1,000 people respectively, which is much lower compared to developed countries.[56] This reflects different levels of urban density and varied qualities of public transport infrastructure. Nationwide, India still has a very low rate of car ownership. When comparing car ownership between BRICS developing countries, it is on a par with China,[57] and exceeded by Brazil and Russia.[57]

 
Hyundai's manufacturing plant at Sriperumbudur, Chennai, Tamil Nadu

Compact cars, especially hatchbacks predominate due to affordability, fuel efficiency, congestion, and lack of parking space in most cities. Chennai is known as the "Detroit of India" for its automobile industry.[58]

Maruti, Hyundai and Tata Motors are the most popular brands in the order of their market share. The Ambassador once had a monopoly, but is now an icon of pre-liberalisation India, and is still used by taxi companies. The Maruti 800 launched in 1984, created the first revolution in the Indian auto sector because of its low price and high quality. It had the highest market share until 2004, when it was overtaken by other low-cost models from Maruti such as the Alto and the Wagon R, the Indica from Tata Motors and the Santro from Hyundai. Over the 20 years since its introduction, about 2.4 million Maruti 800s have been sold.[59] However, with the launch of the Tata Nano, the least expensive production car in the world, the Maruti 800 lost its popularity.[60][citation needed] India is also known for a variety of indigenous vehicles made in villages out of simple motors and vehicle spare parts. A few of these innovations are the jugaad, maruta, chhakda, and the peter rehra.[61]

In the city of Bangalore, Radio One and the Bangalore Traffic Police, launched a carpooling drive which has involved celebrities such as Robin Uthappa, and Rahul Dravid encouraging the public to carpool.[62][63][64] The initiative got a good response, and by the end of May 2009, 10,000 people are said to have carpooled in the city.[65] There have been efforts to improve the energy efficiency of transport systems in Indian cities, including by introducing performance standards for private automobiles or by banning particularly polluting older cars. The city of Kolkata, for example, passed a law in 2009/10 phasing out vehicles over 15 years old with the purpose of reducing air pollution.[66] However, the effects were mixed. On the one hand, poorer urban residents are more likely to see public health improvements from better air quality, since they are more likely to live in polluted areas and work outdoors than richer urban residents.[67] On the other hand, drivers of such vehicles suffered from losing their livelihoods as a result of this environmental regulation.[68]

Utility vehicles edit

The first utility vehicle in India was manufactured by Mahindra. It was a copy of the original Jeep and was manufactured under licence.[69] The vehicle was an instant hit and made Mahindra one of the top companies in India. The Indian Army and police extensively use Mahindra vehicles along with Maruti Gypsys for transporting personnel and equipment. Tata Motors, the automobile manufacturing arm of the Tata Group, launched its first utility vehicle, the Tata Sumo, in 1994.[70][71] The Sumo, owing to its then-modern design, captured a 31% share of the market within two years.[72] The Tempo Trax from Force Motors until recently was ruling the rural areas. Sports utility vehicles now form a sizeable part of the passenger vehicle market.[73] Models from Tata, Honda, Hyundai, Ford and other brands are available.[74]

Taxis edit

 
Taxi in Kolkata
 
Taxi in Mumbai

Most of the taxicabs in Mumbai and Kolkata are either Premier Padmini or Hindustan Ambassador cars.[75] In all other cities, taxi fleets comprise more modern cars. However, foreign-developed app-based taxi services like Uber as well as an Indian-developed app-based taxi services like Ola coming to the fore, taxicabs now include sedans,[76] SUVs [77] and even motorcycle taxis.[78] Depending on the city/state, taxis can either be hailed or hired from taxi-stands. In cities such as Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad and Ahmedabad, taxis need to be hired over phone,[79] whereas in cities like Kolkata and Mumbai, taxis can also be hailed on the street. According to Government of India regulations, all taxis are required to have a fare-meter installed.[80] There are additional surcharges for luggage, late-night rides and toll taxes are to be paid by the passenger. Since year 2006, radio taxis have become increasingly popular with the public due to reasons of safety and convenience.[81]

In cities and localities where taxis are expensive or do not charge as per the government or municipal regulated fares, people use share taxis. These are normal taxis which carry one or more passengers travelling to destinations either on one route to the final destination, or near the final destination.[citation needed] The passengers are charged according to the number of people with different destinations.[citation needed] The city of Mumbai will soon be the first city in India to have an "in-taxi" magazine, titled MumBaee, which will be issued to taxis which are part of the Mumbai Taximen's Union. The magazine debuted on 13 July 2009.[82] In Kolkata, there are many no refusal taxis available with white and blue in colour.[83]

Auto edit

 
An LPG auto rickshaw in, Delhi, India

An auto is a three-wheeler vehicle for hire that does not have doors and is generally characterised by a small cabin for the driver in the front and a seat for passengers in the rear.[84] Generally it is painted in yellow, green or black and has a black, yellow or green canopy on the top, but designs vary considerably from place to place. The colour of the auto rickshaw is also determined by the fuel that it is powered by, for example Agartala, Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Pune and Delhi have green or black autos indicating the use of compressed natural gas, whereas the autos of Kolkata, Bengaluru, Hyderabad have green autos indicating the use of LPG.[citation needed]

In Mumbai and other metropolitan cities, 'autos' or 'rickshaws', as they are popularly known, have regulated metered fares. A recent law prohibits auto rickshaw drivers from charging more than the specified fare, or charging night-fare before midnight, and also prohibits the driver from refusing to go to a particular location. Mumbai and Kolkata are also the only two cities, which prohibit auto rickshaws from entering a certain part of the city, in these cases being South Mumbai and certain parts of Downtown Kolkata.[85] However, in cities like Chennai, it is common to see autorickshaw drivers demand more than the specified fare and refuse to use fare meter.[86]

Airports and railway stations at many cities such as Howrah, Chennai and Bengaluru provide a facility of prepaid auto booths, which requires a fixed payment, with a base fare of Rs. 30 and a rate of Rs.14.20 per kilometre after 1.5 kilometres of travel, set by the authorities as of May, 2022. On this basis, the fare is calculated and is to be paid by the passenger.[87]

Electric rickshaw is new popular means of transport, rapidly growing in number in India, due to low running and initial cost, other economic and environmental benefits, these vehicles are becoming popular in India.[88] E-Rickshaws are made in fiberglass or metal body, powered by a BLDC Electric Motor with max power 2000W and speed 25 km/h.

Rail edit

 
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj railway station entrance
 
The dining saloon of the luxurious Maharajas' Express.
 
Kolkata Metro is the only metro system in India to be controlled by Indian Railways.

Country-wide rail services in India are provided by the state-run Indian Railways (IR) under the supervision of the Ministry of Railways. IR is divided into eighteen zones including the Kolkata Metro Railway.[89] The IR are further sub-divided into sixty seven divisions, each having a divisional headquarters.[90][91]

The railway network travels across the country, covering more than 7,321 stations over a total route length of more than 67,415 km (41,890 mi) and track length of about 123,542 km (76,765 mi) as of March 2021.[92] About 45,000 km (28,000 mi) or 71% of the route-kilometre was electrified as in March 2019.[92] IR provides an important mode of transport in India, transporting 23.1 million passengers and 3.3 million tons of freight daily as of March 2019.[92] IR is the world's eighth-largest employer, it had 1.227 million employees as of March 2019.[92] As to rolling stock, IR owns over 289,185 (freight) wagons, 74,003 coaches and 12,147 locomotives as of March 2019.[92] It also owns locomotive and coach production facilities. It operates both long distance and suburban rail systems.

The IR runs a number of special types of services which are given higher priority. The fastest train at present is the Vande Bharat Express with operation speeds of up to 180 km/h, though the fastest service is Gatimaan Express with an operational speed of 160 km/h (99 mph) and average speed of 100 km/h (62 mph), since the Vande Bharat Express is capped at 120 km/h for safety reasons.[93][94][95][96] The Rajdhani trains introduced in 1969 provides connectivity between the national capital, Delhi and capitals of the states. On the other hand, Shatabdi Express provides connectivity between centres of tourism, pilgrimage or business. The Shatabdi Express trains run over short to medium distances and do not have sleepers while the Rajdhani Expresses run over longer distances and have only sleeping accommodation. Both series of trains have a maximum permissible speed of 110 to 140 km/h (68 to 87 mph) but average speed of less than 100 km/h.[citation needed]. Besides, the IR also operates a number of luxury trains which cater to various tourist circuits. For instance, the Palace on Wheels serves the Rajasthan circuit and The Golden Chariot serves the Karnataka and Goa circuits.[citation needed] There are two UNESCO World Heritage Sites on IR, the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus[97] and the Mountain railways of India.[98] The latter consists of three separate railway lines located in different parts of India, the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, a 610 mm (2 ft) narrow gauge railway in Lesser Himalayas in West Bengal, the Nilgiri Mountain Railway, a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge rack railway in the Nilgiri Hills in Tamil Nadu and the Kalka-Shimla Railway, a 762 mm (2 ft 6 in) narrow gauge railway in the Siwalik Hills in Himachal Pradesh.[98]

In the freight segment, IR ferries various commodities and fuels in industrial, consumer, and agricultural segments across the length and breadth of India. IR has historically subsidised the passenger segment with income from the freight business. As a result, freight services are unable to compete with other modes of transport on both cost and speed of delivery, leading to continuous erosion of market share.[99] To counter this downward trend, IR has started new initiatives in freight segments including upgrading of existing goods sheds, attracting private capital to build multi-commodity multi-modal logistics terminals, changing container sizes, operating time-tabled freight trains, and tweaking with the freight pricing/product mix.[100]

In 1999, the Konkan Railway Corporation introduced the Roll on Roll off (RORO) service, a unique road-rail synergy system, on the section between Kolad in Maharashtra and Verna in Goa,[101] which was extended up to Surathkal in Karnataka in 2004.[102][103] The RORO service, the first of its kind in India, allowed trucks to be transported on flatbed trailers. It was highly popular,[104] carrying about 110,000 trucks and bringing in about 740 million worth of earnings to the corporation until 2007.[105]

Perhaps the game-changer for IR in the freight segment are the new dedicated freight corridors that are expected to be completed by 2020. When fully implemented, the new corridors, spanning around 3300 km, could support hauling of trains up to 1.5 km in length with 32.5-ton axle-load at speeds of 100 kilometres per hour (62 mph). Also, they will free-up capacity on dense passenger routes and will allow IR to run more trains at higher speeds. Additional corridors are being planned to augment the freight infrastructure in the country.

Commuter rail transport edit

In many Indian metropolitan regions, rail is the more efficient and affordable mode of public transport for daily commute. Examples of types of services include long-established local or suburban rail services in cities such as Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai, the century-old tram service in Kolkata, the more recent metro service in Kolkata, Delhi and Chennai and Monorail feeder service in Mumbai.

Suburban rail edit

 
Mumbai suburban rail.
 
The Chennai MRTS and Chennai Suburban, the first elevated railway in India.

The Mumbai Suburban Railway was the first rail system in India, which began its services in Mumbai in 1853, transporting 6.3 million passengers daily and has the highest passenger density in the world.[106] The Kolkata Suburban Railway was established in 1854,[107] and the Chennai Suburban Railway in 1931.[108] The operational suburban rail systems in India are in Mumbai Suburban Railway, Kolkata Suburban Railway, Chennai Suburban Railway, Lucknow-Kanpur Suburban Railway, Delhi Suburban Railway, Pune Suburban Railway, Hyderabad Multi-Modal Transport System, Barabanki-Lucknow Suburban Railway and Karwar railway division.[35] Other planned systems are Bengaluru Commuter Rail, Ahmedabad Suburban Railway and Coimbatore Suburban Railway.

Mass rapid transit system edit

The Chennai MRTS, which began services in 1995, remains the country's first and only mass rapid transit rail. Although distinct from the Chennai Suburban Railway, the MRTS remains integrated in a wider urban rail network.[109]

 
Chennai Metro

Metro edit

The first modern rapid transit in India is the Kolkata Metro which started its operations in 1984 as the 17th Zone of the Indian Railways.[110] The Delhi Metro in New Delhi is India's second conventional metro and began operations in 2002. The Namma Metro in Bengaluru is India's third operational rapid transit and began operations in 2011.[citation needed][111]

The operational systems are Kolkata Metro, Delhi Metro, Bengaluru Metro, Gurgaon Metro, Mumbai Metro, Jaipur Metro, Chennai Metro, Kochi Metro, Lucknow Metro, Nagpur Metro, Noida Metro, Hyderabad Metro, Kanpur Metro, Ahmedabad Metro, Pune Metro, Navi Mumbai Metro.[112]

The under implementation systems are Metro-Link Express for Gandhinagar and Ahmedabad, Varanasi Metro, Bareilly Metro, Vijayawada Metro, Patna Metro, Meerut Metro, Guwahati Metro, Chandigarh Metro, Bhopal Metro, Kozhikode Light Metro, Indore Metro, Thiruvananthapuram Light Metro, Agra Metro, Coimbatore Metro, Visakhapatnam Metro, Surat Metro, Jammu Metro, Srinagar Metro, Greater Gwalior Metro, Jabalpur Metro and Greater Nashik Metro.[citation needed] Currently, rapid transit is under construction or in planning in several major cities of India and will be opened shortly.

Monorail edit

 
A monorail in Mumbai

Monorail is generally considered as feeder system for the metro trains in India. In 2004, monorail was first proposed for Kolkata. But, later the idea was put on hold due to lack of funds and infeasibility.[113] The Mumbai Monorail, which started in 2014, is the first operational monorail network in India[114] (excluding the Skybus Metro) since the Patiala State Monorail Trainways closed in 1927.

Other planned systems are Chennai Monorail, Kolkata Monorail, Allahabad Monorail, Bengaluru Monorail, Delhi Monorail, Indore Monorail, Kanpur Monorail, Navi Mumbai Monorail, Patna Monorail, Pune Monorail, Ahmedabad Monorail, Aizawl Monorail, Bhubaneswar Monorail, Jodhpur Monorail, Kota Monorail, Nagpur Monorail and Nashik Monorail.

Tram edit

 
New fibreglass made tram

In addition to trains, trams were introduced in many cities in late 19th century, though almost all of these were phased out. The trams in Kolkata is currently the only tram system in the country.

International links edit

Rail links between India and neighbouring countries are not well-developed.Bangladesh is connected by a biweekly train, the Maitree Express that runs from Kolkata to Dhaka and a weekly train, the Bandhan Express that runs from Kolkata to Khulna. Two rail links to Nepal exist—passenger services between Jaynagar and Bijalpura, and freight services between Raxaul and Birganj.[115]

No rail link exists with Myanmar but a railway line is to be built through from Jiribam (in Manipur) to Tamu through Imphal and Moreh.[116] The construction of this missing link, as per the feasibility study conducted by the Ministry of External Affairs through RITES Ltd, is estimated to cost 29.41 billion (US$370 million).[117] An 18 km railway link with Bhutan is being constructed from Hashimara in West Bengal to Toribari in Bhutan. No rail link exists with either China or Sri Lanka.[118]

High-speed rail edit

India does not have any railways classified as high-speed rail (HSR), which have operational speeds in excess of 200 km/h (120 mph).[119]

Prior to the 2014 general election, the major national party (Indian National Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party) pledged to introduce high-speed rail. The INC pledged to connect "all of India's million-plus cities by high-speed rail."[120] Later, the BJP, which won the election, promised to build the Diamond Quadrilateral project, which would connect the cities of Chennai, Delhi, Kolkata, and Mumbai via high-speed rail.[121] This project was approved as a priority for the new government in the incoming prime minister's speech.[122] Construction of one kilometer of high speed railway track will cost 1 billion (US$13 million) – 1.4 billion (US$18 million), which is 10–14 times higher than the construction of standard railway.[123] Indian government approved the choice of Japan to build India's first high-speed railway. The planned rail would run some 500 km (310 mi) between Mumbai and the western city of Ahmedabad, at a top speed of 320 km/h (200 mph).[124][125] Under the proposal, construction is expected to begin in 2017 and be completed in 2023. It would cost about 980 billion (US$12 billion) and be financed by a low-interest loan from Japan.[126] India will use the wheel-based 300 km/h HSR technology, instead of new maglev 600 km/h technology of Japan used in Chūō Shinkansen. India is expected to have its HSR line operational from 2025 onwards, once the safety checks are completed.

Light rail edit

Like monorail, light rail is also considered as a feeder system for the metro systems. The planned systems are Kolkata Light Rail Transit and Delhi Light Rail Transit.

Airways edit

 
Air India, The flag carrier of India
 
IndiGo, the largest airline of India
 
Cochin International Airport is one of the busiest airport in India

Directorate General of Civil Aviation is the national regulatory body for the aviation industry. It is controlled by the Ministry of Civil Aviation. The ministry also controls aviation related autonomous organisations like the Airports Authority of India (AAI), Bureau of Civil Aviation Security (BCAS), Indira Gandhi Rashtriya Uran Akademi and Public Sector Undertakings including Pawan Hans Helicopters Limited and Hindustan Aeronautics Limited.[127]

Air India is India's national flag carrier after merging with Indian (airline) in 2011[128] and plays a major role in connecting India with the rest of the world.[129] IndiGo, Air India, Spicejet, Vistara, Jet Airways and Go First are the major carriers in order of their market share.[130] These airlines connect more than 80 cities across India and also operate overseas routes after the liberalisation of Indian aviation. Several other foreign airlines connect Indian cities with other major cities across the globe. However, a large section of country's air transport potential remains untapped, even though the Mumbai-Delhi air corridor was ranked the world's tenth busiest route by Amadeus in 2012.[131][132]

Airports edit

 
Mumbai Airport Terminal
 
Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the inauguration of Paykong Airport, Sikkim.

While there are 346[133] civilian airfields in India – 253 with paved runways and 93 with unpaved runways, only 132 were classified as "airports" as of November 2014.[134] Of these, Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi is the busiest in the country.[135][136][137] The operations of the major airports in India have been privatised over the past five years and this has resulted in better equipped and cleaner airports. The terminals have either been refurbished or expanded.

India also has 33 "ghost airports," which were built in an effort to make air travel more accessible for those in remote regions but are now non-operational due to a lack of demand. The Jaisalmer Airport in Rajasthan, for example, was completed in 2013 and was expected to host 300,000 passengers a year but has yet to see any commercial flights take off. Despite the number of non-operational airports, India is currently planning on constructing another 200 "low-cost" airports over the next 20 years.[138]

Length of runways Airports
with paved
runways[133]
Airports
with unpaved
runways[133]
3,047 m (9,997 ft) or more 21 1
2,438 to 3,047 m (7,999 to 9,997 ft) 59 3
1,524 to 2,438 m (5,000 to 7,999 ft) 76 6
914 to 1,524 m (2,999 to 5,000 ft) 82 38
Under 914 m (2,999 ft) 14 45
Total 253 93

Heliports edit

 
Pawan Hans VT-PHA Helicopter.

As of 2021, there are 45 heliports in India.[133] India also has the world's highest helipad at the Siachen Glacier at a height of 6,400 m (21,000 ft) above mean sea level.[139] Pawan Hans Helicopters Limited is a public sector company that provides helicopter services to ONGC to its off-shore locations, and also to various State Governments in India, particularly in North-east India.[140]

Water edit

India has a coastline of 7,517 km (4,671 mi),[141] and thus ports are the main centres of trade. India also has an extensive network of inland waterways.

 
Chennai Port is the largest container port in the Bay of Bengal.

Ports and shipping edit

 
Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust in Navi Mumbai ranks 25th in the world as per container traffic.[142]

In India, about 96% of the foreign trade by quantity and 70% by value takes place through the ports.[143] Mumbai Port & JNPT(Navi Mumbai) handles 70% of maritime trade in India.[144] There are twelve major ports: Navi Mumbai, Mumbai, Chennai, Ennore, Thoothukudi, Kochi, Kolkata (including Haldia), Paradip, Visakhapatnam, New Mangaluru, Mormugao and Kandla.[145] Other than these, there are 187 minor and intermediate ports, 43 of which handle cargo.[145]

Maritime transportation in India is managed by the Shipping Corporation of India, a government-owned company that also manages offshore and other marine transport infrastructure in the country. It owns and operates about 35% of Indian tonnage and operates in practically all areas of shipping business servicing both national and international trades. The only Indian state with three ports is Tamil Nadu, they are Ennore, Chennai and Tuticorin.[146]

It has a fleet of 79 ships of 2,750,000 GT (4.8 million DWT) and also manages 53 research, survey and support vessels of 120,000 GT (060,000 DWT) on behalf of various government departments and other organisations.[147] Personnel are trained at the Maritime Training Institute in Mumbai, a branch of the World Maritime University, which was set up in 1987.[148] The corporation also operates in Malta and Iran through joint ventures.[147]

The distinction between major and minor ports is not based on the amount of cargo handled. The major ports are managed by port trusts which are regulated by the central government.[149] They come under the purview of the Major Port Trusts Act, 1963.[150][citation needed] The minor ports are regulated by the respective state governments and many of these ports are private ports or captive ports.[150][citation needed] The total amount of traffic handled at the major ports in 2005–2006 was 382.33 Mt.[145]

Inland Waterways edit

 
A parked vessel along the Chapora River in Goa.
 
Boats sailing on National Waterway 2 at Guwahati

India has an extensive network of inland waterways in the form of rivers, canals, backwaters and creeks. The total navigable length is 14,500 kilometres (9,000 mi), out of which about 5,200 km (3,231 mi) of river and 485 km (301 mi) of canals can be used by mechanised crafts.[151] Freight transport by waterways is highly underutilised in India compared to other large countries. The total cargo moved by inland waterways is just 0.15% of the total inland traffic in India, compared to the corresponding figures of 20% for Germany and 32% for Bangladesh.[152]

Cargo that is transported in an organised manner is confined to a few waterways in Goa, West Bengal, Assam and Kerala.[153][citation needed] The Inland Waterways Authority of India (IWAI) is the statutory authority in charge of the waterways in India. It does the function of building the necessary infrastructure in these waterways, surveying the economic feasibility of new projects and also administration and regulation.[154][citation needed] The following waterways have been declared as National Waterways:

Pipelines edit

Oil and gas industry in India imports 82% of its oil needs and aims to bring that down to 67% by 2022 by replacing it with local exploration, renewable energy and indigenous ethanol fuel (c. Jan 2018).[158]

  • Length of pipelines for crude oil is 20,000 km (12,427 mi).
  • Length of Petroleum products pipeline is 15,000 kilometres (9,300 mi).

Cable edit

Cable transport, commonly known as Ropeways in India, are mostly located in mountainous areas such as in Kashmir. Some of them are also located in amusement parks such Nicco Park and Science City in Kolkata.

Logistics edit

Logistics in India ranking moved up to 35th place in 2016 from 54th in 2014 on World Bank's Global Logistics Performance Index.[159] Government strategy aims to raise the share of global trade in India's GDP (US$2.7 trillion in FY 2017–18)[160] to 40%, including half of it (20% of GDP) from exports (c. Jan 2019).[161] Cost of logistics in India is 14% of GDP, which is higher than the developed nations, and government reforms aim to bring it down to 10% of GDP by 2022 (c. Jan 2018).[159] Ministry of Commerce and Industry has created a new dedicated centralised Logistics division in collaboration with Singapore and Japan to handle the logistics which was earlier handled by several different ministries, such as railways, roads, shipping and aviation.[162] To boot exports, each state will have exports and logistic policy and Nodal officers will be appointed at district level (c. Jan 2018).[161] There are 64 transactions and 37 government agencies in the end-to-end production-to-export process. To further improve the ranking, improve speed of logistics, ease of doing business and reduce the cost of logistics, India is creating a "common online integrated logistics e-marketplace portal" that will cover all transactions in production and export, connect buyers with logistics service providers and government agencies such as the customs department Icegate system, Port Community Systems, Sea and Air Port terminals, Shipping lines, Railways, etc. (c. Jan 2018).[159]

As part of the US$125 billion port-led development project Sagarmala, the government will define the regulatory framework for the Indian logistics operational standards by India's 300 dry ports logistics parks (inland container depots or ICDs) to the top 10 logistics international best practices nations to boost exports, remove supply chain bottlenecks, reduce transaction costs, optimise logistics mix, set up new hub-and-spoke dry ports (c. January 2018).[163] To reduce the logistics costs by 10% and CO2 emissions by 12%, the government is also developing 35 new "Multimodal Logistics Parks" (MMLPs) on 36 ring roads, which will facilitate 50% of the freight moved in India. Land has been earmarked and pre-feasibility studies are underway for six of these MMLPs (c. May 2017).[164]

Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) and government will organise an annual national logistics convention.[159] Major shippers include Container Corporation of India and Transport Corporation of India, and Logistics Management magazine is one of the industry publications.

Modernisation edit

In 1998, the Supreme Court of India published a directive that specified the date of April 2001 as deadline to replace or convert all buses, three-wheelers and taxis in Delhi to compressed natural gas.[165]

The Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation was the first state transport undertaking in India to utilise bio-fuels and ethanol-blended fuels.[166] KSRTC took an initiative to do research in alternative fuel forms by experimenting with various alternatives — blending diesel with biofuels such as honge, palm, sunflower, groundnut, coconut and sesame.[167] In 2009, the corporation decided to promote the use of biofuel buses.[168]

In 2017, the government announced that by 2030, only electric vehicles would be sold in the country.[169] It also announced that by 2022 all trains would be electric.[170]

In March 2020, the Government of India temporarily suspended all passenger rail, metro and bus services due to COVID-19[171]

See also edit

Multimodel and international
Similar rail development
Similar roads development
Similar ports and river transport development
Similar air transport development
General

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  This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook. CIA.

External links edit

  • Ministry of Road Transport & Highways
  • Mile by Mile, India Paves a Smoother Road to Its Future, The New York Times, 4 December 2005.

transport, india, consists, transport, land, water, road, transport, primary, mode, transport, most, indian, citizens, india, road, transport, systems, among, most, heavily, used, world, golden, quadrilateral, connects, four, major, metro, cities, india, delhi. Transport in India consists of transport by land water and air Road transport is the primary mode of transport for most Indian citizens and India s road transport systems are among the most heavily used in the world The Golden Quadrilateral connects the four major metro cities of India viz Delhi north Kolkata east Chennai south and Mumbai west India s road network is the second largest after the United States and one of the busiest in the world transporting 8 225 billion passengers and over 980 million tonnes of cargo annually as of 2015 1 India s rail network is the fourth largest and second busiest in the world transporting 8 09 billion passengers and 1 20 billion tonnes of freight annually as of 2020 update 2 Aviation in India is broadly divided into military and civil aviation which is the fastest growing aviation market in the world IATA data 3 India s waterways network in the form of rivers canals backwaters and creeks is the ninth largest waterway network in the world Freight transport by waterways is highly under utilised in India with the total cargo moved in tonne kilometres by inland waterways being 0 1 percent of the total inland traffic in India 4 In total about 21 percent of households have two wheelers whereas 4 70 percent of households in India have cars or vans as per the 2011 census of India 5 6 The automobile industry in India is currently growing rapidly with an annual production of over 4 6 million vehicles 7 with an annual growth rate of 10 5 5 and vehicle volume is expected to rise greatly in the future 8 Contents 1 Traditional means of transport 1 1 Walking 1 2 Palanquins 1 3 Bullock carts 2 Bicycles 2 1 Human pulled rickshaws 2 2 Cycle rickshaw 3 Road 3 1 Bus 3 1 1 Bus rapid transit systems 3 2 Motor vehicles 3 2 1 Two wheelers 3 2 2 Automobiles 3 2 3 Utility vehicles 3 3 Taxis 3 4 Auto 4 Rail 4 1 Commuter rail transport 4 1 1 Suburban rail 4 1 2 Mass rapid transit system 4 1 3 Metro 4 1 4 Monorail 4 1 5 Tram 4 2 International links 4 3 High speed rail 4 4 Light rail 5 Airways 5 1 Airports 5 2 Heliports 6 Water 6 1 Ports and shipping 6 2 Inland Waterways 7 Pipelines 8 Cable 9 Logistics 10 Modernisation 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksTraditional means of transport editWalking edit Walking was a major transport form in ancient times People used to cover long distances on foot or bullock carts For instance Adi Sankaracharya travelled all over India from Kalady near Kochi 9 Walking still constitutes an important mode of transport in rural areas 10 In the city of Mumbai to further improve the transit conditions for pedestrians the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority has commenced the construction of more than 50 skywalks 11 12 as part of the Mumbai Skywalk project which is very helpful as walk enthusiasts take part in reducing traffic The Dakshineswar Skywalk has also come up in West Bengal Palanquins edit Main article Palanquin nbsp Royal Palanquin of Mehrangarh FortPalanquins also known as palkis were one of the luxurious methods used by the rich and noblemen for travelling and also to carry a deity idol of a god Many temples have sculptures of a god being carried in palkis 13 Modern use of the palanquin is limited to Indian weddings pilgrimage and carrying idols of gods 14 15 Bullock carts edit nbsp A bullock cartBullock carts were used to be ways of transportation in India but it can t be seen today due to low speed and safety citation needed Many years ago the government banned bullock carts citation needed Bicycles editMain article Cycling in India Bicycles or cycles have ownership rates ranging from around 30 to 75 at the state level 6 Along with walking cycling accounts for 50 to 80 of the commuter trips for those in the informal sector in urban areas 10 However recent developments suggest that bicycle riding is quickly becoming popular in Indian cities In smaller Indian cities non motorized transport which includes cycling accounts for close to 50 of the total trips by the working class population In larger cities like Mumbai Bengaluru and Delhi non motorized transport accounts for 35 37 of the total trips 16 In recent years government development authorities all over India encourages the setup and use of separate bicycle lanes alongside the roads to combat pollution and ease traffic congestion 17 Human pulled rickshaws edit nbsp Human pulled rickshaws still run in KolkataHuman pulled rickshaws are nowadays rarely available in various cities and villages in the country Many local governments have proposed a ban on these rickshaws describing them as inhuman The Government of West Bengal proposed a ban on these rickshaws in 2005 18 Though a bill aiming to address this issue termed as Calcutta Hackney Carriage Bill was passed by the West Bengal Assembly in 2006 it has not yet been implemented 19 The Government of West Bengal is working on an amendment to this bill to avoid the loopholes that were exposed when the Hand pulled Rickshaw Owners Association filed a petition against the bill 19 Cycle rickshaw edit Cycle rickshaws were introduced in India in the 1940s 20 They are bigger than a tricycle where two people sit on an elevated seat at the back and a person pedals from the front In the late 2000s they were banned in several cities for causing traffic congestion 21 22 23 The Delhi Police recently submitted an affidavit against plying of cycle rickshaws to ease traffic congestion in the city but it was dismissed by the Delhi High Court 24 In addition environmentalists have supported the retention of cycle rickshaws as a non polluting mode of transport 25 nbsp Public buses near Howrah Railway Station in Kolkata West Bengal nbsp Delhi Meerut Expressway is India s widest expressway with 14 lanes Road editMain article Roads in India nbsp Kathipara Junction Chennai nbsp Bandra Worli Bridge in MumbaiAs per 2017 estimates the total road length in India is 5 603 293 km 3 481 725 mi 26 27 making the Indian road network the second largest road network in the world after the United States At 0 66 km of highway per square kilometre of land the density of India s highway network is higher than that of the United States 0 65 and far higher than that of China s 0 16 or Brazil s 0 20 1 India has a network of National Highways connecting all the major cities and state capitals forming the economic backbone of the country As of 2013 India has a total of 66 754 km 41 479 mi of National Highways of which 1 205 km 749 mi are classified as expressways 28 Although India has large network of four or more lane highways of international quality standards but without access control entry exit control they are not called as expressways but simply highways As per the National Highways Authority of India about 66 of freight and 82 passenger traffic is carried by the roads The National Highways carry about 40 of total road traffic though only about 2 of the road network is covered by these roads 28 Average growth of the number of vehicles has been around 10 16 per annum over recent years 28 India also has many bridges and flyovers in major cities to reduce traffic congestion Some notable projects include Bandra Worli Sea link in Mumbai and Kathipara Cloverleaf Interchange in Chennai India s metropolitan intra city average traffic vehicle speed in Delhi was 25 km h 16 mph in Mumbai 20 7 km h 12 9 mph in Chennai 18 9 km h 11 7 mph and in Kolkata 19 2 km h 11 9 mph as per a study by Ola Cabs in 2017 Under National Highways Development Project NHDP work is under progress to equip national highways with at least four lanes there is also a plan to convert some stretches of these roads to six lanes 29 In recent years construction has commenced on a nationwide system of multi lane highways including the Golden Quadrilateral connecting four important metropolitan cities of India Delhi Kolkata Chennai Mumbai and North South and East West Corridors which link the largest cities in India In 2000 around 40 of villages in India lacked access to all weather roads and remained isolated during the monsoon season 1 30 To improve rural connectivity Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana Prime Minister s Rural Road Program a project funded by the Central Government with the help of the World Bank was launched in 2000 to build all weather roads to connect all habitations with a population of 500 or above 250 or above for hilly areas 30 31 Type of road LengthExpressways 4 027 719 km 2 502 709 mi as of 2023National Highways 151 019 km 93 839 mi State Highways 186 528 km 115 903 mi District and rural roads 5 167 665 km 3 211 038 mi Total Length 6 215 797 km 3 862 317 mi Approx The Trans Harbour bridge is the longest bridge in India It will be opened on 12 January 2024 after Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurates the bridge It connects Bombay with Navi Mumbai 32 33 Bus edit nbsp Mumbai s B E S T is India s oldest operating transport bodyBuses are an important means of public transport in India Due to this social significance urban bus transport is often owned and operated by public agencies and most state governments operate bus services through a state road transport corporation 34 These corporations have proven extremely useful in connecting villages and towns across the country 35 Alongside the public companies there are many private bus fleets As of 2012 there were 131 800 publicly owned buses in India but 1 544 700 buses owned by private companies 36 However the share of buses is negligible in most Indian cities as compared to personalised vehicles and two wheelers and cars account for more than 80 percent of the vehicle population in most large cities 35 Bus rapid transit systems edit Main article Bus rapid transit in India nbsp Ahmedabad BRTS nbsp Raipur and Naya Raipur Bus Rapid Transit System nbsp A KSRTC Volvo bus Such buses are common across the country Bus rapid transit systems BRTS exist in several cities 37 Buses take up over 90 of public transport in Indian cities 38 and serve as an important mode of transport Services are mostly run by state government owned transport corporations 35 In 1990s all government state transport corporations have introduced various facilities like low floor buses for the disabled and air conditioned buses to attract private car owners to help decongest roads 39 40 In 2010 the Ahmedabad Bus Rapid Transit System won the prestigious Sustainable Transport Award from the Transportation Research Board in Washington 41 Rainbow BRTS in Pune is the first BRTS system in the country Mumbai introduced air conditioned buses in 1998 42 Bangalore was the first city in India to introduce Volvo B7RLE intra city buses in India in January 2005 43 44 45 Bangalore is the first Indian city to have an air conditioned bus stop located near Cubbon Park It was built by Airtel 46 The city of Chennai houses one of Asia s largest bus terminus the Chennai Mofussil Bus Terminus 47 Motor vehicles edit Two wheelers edit Motorised two wheeler vehicles like scooters motorcycles and mopeds are very popular due to their fuel efficiency and ease of use in congested roads or streets The number of two wheelers sold is several times to that of cars There were 47 5 million powered two wheelers in India in 2003 compared with just 8 6 million cars 48 Manufacture of motorcycles in India started when Royal Enfield began assembly in its plant in Chennai in 1948 Royal Enfield an iconic brand name in the country manufactures different variants of the British Bullet motorcycle which is a classic motorcycle that is still in production 49 Hero MotoCorp formerly Hero Honda Honda Bajaj Auto Yamaha TVS Motors and Mahindra 2 Wheelers are the largest two wheeler companies in terms of market share 50 Manufacture of scooters in India started when Automobile Products of India API set up at Mumbai and incorporated in 1949 They began assembling Innocenti built Lambretta scooters in India 51 They eventually acquired a licence for the Li150 series model of which they began full fledged production from the early 1960s onwards citation needed In 1972 Scooters India Limited SIL a state run enterprise based in Lucknow Uttar Pradesh bought the entire manufacturing rights of the last Innocenti Lambretta model API has infrastructural facilities at Mumbai Aurangabad and Chennai but has been non operational since 2002 citation needed SIL stopped producing scooters in 1998 citation needed Motorcycles and scooters can be rented in many cities Wicked Ride Metro Bikes and many other companies are working with state governments to solve last mile connectivity problems with mass transit 52 Wearing protective headgear is mandatory for both the rider and the pillion rider in most cities 53 Automobiles edit Private automobiles account for 30 of the total transport demand in urban areas of India An average of 963 new private vehicles are registered every day in Delhi alone 54 The number of automobiles produced in India rose from 6 3 million in 2002 2003 to 11 million 11 2 million in 2008 2009 55 There is substantial variation among cities and states in terms of dependence on private cars Bangalore Chennai Delhi and Kolkata have 185 127 157 and 140 cars per 1 000 people respectively which is much lower compared to developed countries 56 This reflects different levels of urban density and varied qualities of public transport infrastructure Nationwide India still has a very low rate of car ownership When comparing car ownership between BRICS developing countries it is on a par with China 57 and exceeded by Brazil and Russia 57 nbsp Hyundai s manufacturing plant at Sriperumbudur Chennai Tamil NaduCompact cars especially hatchbacks predominate due to affordability fuel efficiency congestion and lack of parking space in most cities Chennai is known as the Detroit of India for its automobile industry 58 Maruti Hyundai and Tata Motors are the most popular brands in the order of their market share The Ambassador once had a monopoly but is now an icon of pre liberalisation India and is still used by taxi companies The Maruti 800 launched in 1984 created the first revolution in the Indian auto sector because of its low price and high quality It had the highest market share until 2004 when it was overtaken by other low cost models from Maruti such as the Alto and the Wagon R the Indica from Tata Motors and the Santro from Hyundai Over the 20 years since its introduction about 2 4 million Maruti 800s have been sold 59 However with the launch of the Tata Nano the least expensive production car in the world the Maruti 800 lost its popularity 60 citation needed India is also known for a variety of indigenous vehicles made in villages out of simple motors and vehicle spare parts A few of these innovations are the jugaad maruta chhakda and the peter rehra 61 In the city of Bangalore Radio One and the Bangalore Traffic Police launched a carpooling drive which has involved celebrities such as Robin Uthappa and Rahul Dravid encouraging the public to carpool 62 63 64 The initiative got a good response and by the end of May 2009 10 000 people are said to have carpooled in the city 65 There have been efforts to improve the energy efficiency of transport systems in Indian cities including by introducing performance standards for private automobiles or by banning particularly polluting older cars The city of Kolkata for example passed a law in 2009 10 phasing out vehicles over 15 years old with the purpose of reducing air pollution 66 However the effects were mixed On the one hand poorer urban residents are more likely to see public health improvements from better air quality since they are more likely to live in polluted areas and work outdoors than richer urban residents 67 On the other hand drivers of such vehicles suffered from losing their livelihoods as a result of this environmental regulation 68 Utility vehicles edit The first utility vehicle in India was manufactured by Mahindra It was a copy of the original Jeep and was manufactured under licence 69 The vehicle was an instant hit and made Mahindra one of the top companies in India The Indian Army and police extensively use Mahindra vehicles along with Maruti Gypsys for transporting personnel and equipment Tata Motors the automobile manufacturing arm of the Tata Group launched its first utility vehicle the Tata Sumo in 1994 70 71 The Sumo owing to its then modern design captured a 31 share of the market within two years 72 The Tempo Trax from Force Motors until recently was ruling the rural areas Sports utility vehicles now form a sizeable part of the passenger vehicle market 73 Models from Tata Honda Hyundai Ford and other brands are available 74 Taxis edit Main article Taxis in India nbsp Taxi in Kolkata nbsp Taxi in Mumbai Most of the taxicabs in Mumbai and Kolkata are either Premier Padmini or Hindustan Ambassador cars 75 In all other cities taxi fleets comprise more modern cars However foreign developed app based taxi services like Uber as well as an Indian developed app based taxi services like Ola coming to the fore taxicabs now include sedans 76 SUVs 77 and even motorcycle taxis 78 Depending on the city state taxis can either be hailed or hired from taxi stands In cities such as Bengaluru Chennai Hyderabad and Ahmedabad taxis need to be hired over phone 79 whereas in cities like Kolkata and Mumbai taxis can also be hailed on the street According to Government of India regulations all taxis are required to have a fare meter installed 80 There are additional surcharges for luggage late night rides and toll taxes are to be paid by the passenger Since year 2006 radio taxis have become increasingly popular with the public due to reasons of safety and convenience 81 In cities and localities where taxis are expensive or do not charge as per the government or municipal regulated fares people use share taxis These are normal taxis which carry one or more passengers travelling to destinations either on one route to the final destination or near the final destination citation needed The passengers are charged according to the number of people with different destinations citation needed The city of Mumbai will soon be the first city in India to have an in taxi magazine titled MumBaee which will be issued to taxis which are part of the Mumbai Taximen s Union The magazine debuted on 13 July 2009 82 In Kolkata there are many no refusal taxis available with white and blue in colour 83 Auto edit Main article Auto rickshaw nbsp An LPG auto rickshaw in Delhi IndiaAn auto is a three wheeler vehicle for hire that does not have doors and is generally characterised by a small cabin for the driver in the front and a seat for passengers in the rear 84 Generally it is painted in yellow green or black and has a black yellow or green canopy on the top but designs vary considerably from place to place The colour of the auto rickshaw is also determined by the fuel that it is powered by for example Agartala Ahmedabad Mumbai Pune and Delhi have green or black autos indicating the use of compressed natural gas whereas the autos of Kolkata Bengaluru Hyderabad have green autos indicating the use of LPG citation needed In Mumbai and other metropolitan cities autos or rickshaws as they are popularly known have regulated metered fares A recent law prohibits auto rickshaw drivers from charging more than the specified fare or charging night fare before midnight and also prohibits the driver from refusing to go to a particular location Mumbai and Kolkata are also the only two cities which prohibit auto rickshaws from entering a certain part of the city in these cases being South Mumbai and certain parts of Downtown Kolkata 85 However in cities like Chennai it is common to see autorickshaw drivers demand more than the specified fare and refuse to use fare meter 86 Airports and railway stations at many cities such as Howrah Chennai and Bengaluru provide a facility of prepaid auto booths which requires a fixed payment with a base fare of Rs 30 and a rate of Rs 14 20 per kilometre after 1 5 kilometres of travel set by the authorities as of May 2022 On this basis the fare is calculated and is to be paid by the passenger 87 Electric rickshaw is new popular means of transport rapidly growing in number in India due to low running and initial cost other economic and environmental benefits these vehicles are becoming popular in India 88 E Rickshaws are made in fiberglass or metal body powered by a BLDC Electric Motor with max power 2000W and speed 25 km h Rail editMain articles Rail transport in India and Indian Railways nbsp Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj railway station entrance nbsp The dining saloon of the luxurious Maharajas Express nbsp Kolkata Metro is the only metro system in India to be controlled by Indian Railways Country wide rail services in India are provided by the state run Indian Railways IR under the supervision of the Ministry of Railways IR is divided into eighteen zones including the Kolkata Metro Railway 89 The IR are further sub divided into sixty seven divisions each having a divisional headquarters 90 91 The railway network travels across the country covering more than 7 321 stations over a total route length of more than 67 415 km 41 890 mi and track length of about 123 542 km 76 765 mi as of March 2021 92 About 45 000 km 28 000 mi or 71 of the route kilometre was electrified as in March 2019 92 IR provides an important mode of transport in India transporting 23 1 million passengers and 3 3 million tons of freight daily as of March 2019 92 IR is the world s eighth largest employer it had 1 227 million employees as of March 2019 92 As to rolling stock IR owns over 289 185 freight wagons 74 003 coaches and 12 147 locomotives as of March 2019 92 It also owns locomotive and coach production facilities It operates both long distance and suburban rail systems The IR runs a number of special types of services which are given higher priority The fastest train at present is the Vande Bharat Express with operation speeds of up to 180 km h though the fastest service is Gatimaan Express with an operational speed of 160 km h 99 mph and average speed of 100 km h 62 mph since the Vande Bharat Express is capped at 120 km h for safety reasons 93 94 95 96 The Rajdhani trains introduced in 1969 provides connectivity between the national capital Delhi and capitals of the states On the other hand Shatabdi Express provides connectivity between centres of tourism pilgrimage or business The Shatabdi Express trains run over short to medium distances and do not have sleepers while the Rajdhani Expresses run over longer distances and have only sleeping accommodation Both series of trains have a maximum permissible speed of 110 to 140 km h 68 to 87 mph but average speed of less than 100 km h citation needed Besides the IR also operates a number of luxury trains which cater to various tourist circuits For instance the Palace on Wheels serves the Rajasthan circuit and The Golden Chariot serves the Karnataka and Goa circuits citation needed There are two UNESCO World Heritage Sites on IR the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus 97 and the Mountain railways of India 98 The latter consists of three separate railway lines located in different parts of India the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway a 610 mm 2 ft narrow gauge railway in Lesser Himalayas in West Bengal the Nilgiri Mountain Railway a 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in metre gauge rack railway in the Nilgiri Hills in Tamil Nadu and the Kalka Shimla Railway a 762 mm 2 ft 6 in narrow gauge railway in the Siwalik Hills in Himachal Pradesh 98 In the freight segment IR ferries various commodities and fuels in industrial consumer and agricultural segments across the length and breadth of India IR has historically subsidised the passenger segment with income from the freight business As a result freight services are unable to compete with other modes of transport on both cost and speed of delivery leading to continuous erosion of market share 99 To counter this downward trend IR has started new initiatives in freight segments including upgrading of existing goods sheds attracting private capital to build multi commodity multi modal logistics terminals changing container sizes operating time tabled freight trains and tweaking with the freight pricing product mix 100 In 1999 the Konkan Railway Corporation introduced the Roll on Roll off RORO service a unique road rail synergy system on the section between Kolad in Maharashtra and Verna in Goa 101 which was extended up to Surathkal in Karnataka in 2004 102 103 The RORO service the first of its kind in India allowed trucks to be transported on flatbed trailers It was highly popular 104 carrying about 110 000 trucks and bringing in about 740 million worth of earnings to the corporation until 2007 105 Perhaps the game changer for IR in the freight segment are the new dedicated freight corridors that are expected to be completed by 2020 When fully implemented the new corridors spanning around 3300 km could support hauling of trains up to 1 5 km in length with 32 5 ton axle load at speeds of 100 kilometres per hour 62 mph Also they will free up capacity on dense passenger routes and will allow IR to run more trains at higher speeds Additional corridors are being planned to augment the freight infrastructure in the country Commuter rail transport edit In many Indian metropolitan regions rail is the more efficient and affordable mode of public transport for daily commute Examples of types of services include long established local or suburban rail services in cities such as Mumbai Kolkata and Chennai the century old tram service in Kolkata the more recent metro service in Kolkata Delhi and Chennai and Monorail feeder service in Mumbai Suburban rail edit nbsp Mumbai suburban rail nbsp The Chennai MRTS and Chennai Suburban the first elevated railway in India Main article Urban rail transit in India The Mumbai Suburban Railway was the first rail system in India which began its services in Mumbai in 1853 transporting 6 3 million passengers daily and has the highest passenger density in the world 106 The Kolkata Suburban Railway was established in 1854 107 and the Chennai Suburban Railway in 1931 108 The operational suburban rail systems in India are in Mumbai Suburban Railway Kolkata Suburban Railway Chennai Suburban Railway Lucknow Kanpur Suburban Railway Delhi Suburban Railway Pune Suburban Railway Hyderabad Multi Modal Transport System Barabanki Lucknow Suburban Railway and Karwar railway division 35 Other planned systems are Bengaluru Commuter Rail Ahmedabad Suburban Railway and Coimbatore Suburban Railway Mass rapid transit system edit The Chennai MRTS which began services in 1995 remains the country s first and only mass rapid transit rail Although distinct from the Chennai Suburban Railway the MRTS remains integrated in a wider urban rail network 109 nbsp Chennai MetroMetro edit Main article Urban rail transit in India The first modern rapid transit in India is the Kolkata Metro which started its operations in 1984 as the 17th Zone of the Indian Railways 110 The Delhi Metro in New Delhi is India s second conventional metro and began operations in 2002 The Namma Metro in Bengaluru is India s third operational rapid transit and began operations in 2011 citation needed 111 The operational systems are Kolkata Metro Delhi Metro Bengaluru Metro Gurgaon Metro Mumbai Metro Jaipur Metro Chennai Metro Kochi Metro Lucknow Metro Nagpur Metro Noida Metro Hyderabad Metro Kanpur Metro Ahmedabad Metro Pune Metro Navi Mumbai Metro 112 The under implementation systems are Metro Link Express for Gandhinagar and Ahmedabad Varanasi Metro Bareilly Metro Vijayawada Metro Patna Metro Meerut Metro Guwahati Metro Chandigarh Metro Bhopal Metro Kozhikode Light Metro Indore Metro Thiruvananthapuram Light Metro Agra Metro Coimbatore Metro Visakhapatnam Metro Surat Metro Jammu Metro Srinagar Metro Greater Gwalior Metro Jabalpur Metro and Greater Nashik Metro citation needed Currently rapid transit is under construction or in planning in several major cities of India and will be opened shortly Monorail edit nbsp A monorail in MumbaiMain article Urban rail transit in India Monorail is generally considered as feeder system for the metro trains in India In 2004 monorail was first proposed for Kolkata But later the idea was put on hold due to lack of funds and infeasibility 113 The Mumbai Monorail which started in 2014 is the first operational monorail network in India 114 excluding the Skybus Metro since the Patiala State Monorail Trainways closed in 1927 Other planned systems are Chennai Monorail Kolkata Monorail Allahabad Monorail Bengaluru Monorail Delhi Monorail Indore Monorail Kanpur Monorail Navi Mumbai Monorail Patna Monorail Pune Monorail Ahmedabad Monorail Aizawl Monorail Bhubaneswar Monorail Jodhpur Monorail Kota Monorail Nagpur Monorail and Nashik Monorail Tram edit nbsp New fibreglass made tramMain article Trams in India In addition to trains trams were introduced in many cities in late 19th century though almost all of these were phased out The trams in Kolkata is currently the only tram system in the country International links edit Rail links between India and neighbouring countries are not well developed Bangladesh is connected by a biweekly train the Maitree Express that runs from Kolkata to Dhaka and a weekly train the Bandhan Express that runs from Kolkata to Khulna Two rail links to Nepal exist passenger services between Jaynagar and Bijalpura and freight services between Raxaul and Birganj 115 No rail link exists with Myanmar but a railway line is to be built through from Jiribam in Manipur to Tamu through Imphal and Moreh 116 The construction of this missing link as per the feasibility study conducted by the Ministry of External Affairs through RITES Ltd is estimated to cost 29 41 billion US 370 million 117 An 18 km railway link with Bhutan is being constructed from Hashimara in West Bengal to Toribari in Bhutan No rail link exists with either China or Sri Lanka 118 High speed rail edit Main article High speed rail in India India does not have any railways classified as high speed rail HSR which have operational speeds in excess of 200 km h 120 mph 119 Prior to the 2014 general election the major national party Indian National Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party pledged to introduce high speed rail The INC pledged to connect all of India s million plus cities by high speed rail 120 Later the BJP which won the election promised to build the Diamond Quadrilateral project which would connect the cities of Chennai Delhi Kolkata and Mumbai via high speed rail 121 This project was approved as a priority for the new government in the incoming prime minister s speech 122 Construction of one kilometer of high speed railway track will cost 1 billion US 13 million 1 4 billion US 18 million which is 10 14 times higher than the construction of standard railway 123 Indian government approved the choice of Japan to build India s first high speed railway The planned rail would run some 500 km 310 mi between Mumbai and the western city of Ahmedabad at a top speed of 320 km h 200 mph 124 125 Under the proposal construction is expected to begin in 2017 and be completed in 2023 It would cost about 980 billion US 12 billion and be financed by a low interest loan from Japan 126 India will use the wheel based 300 km h HSR technology instead of new maglev 600 km h technology of Japan used in Chuō Shinkansen India is expected to have its HSR line operational from 2025 onwards once the safety checks are completed Light rail edit Main article Urban rail transit in India Like monorail light rail is also considered as a feeder system for the metro systems The planned systems are Kolkata Light Rail Transit and Delhi Light Rail Transit Airways editMain article Aviation in India nbsp Air India The flag carrier of India nbsp IndiGo the largest airline of India nbsp Cochin International Airport is one of the busiest airport in IndiaDirectorate General of Civil Aviation is the national regulatory body for the aviation industry It is controlled by the Ministry of Civil Aviation The ministry also controls aviation related autonomous organisations like the Airports Authority of India AAI Bureau of Civil Aviation Security BCAS Indira Gandhi Rashtriya Uran Akademi and Public Sector Undertakings including Pawan Hans Helicopters Limited and Hindustan Aeronautics Limited 127 Air India is India s national flag carrier after merging with Indian airline in 2011 128 and plays a major role in connecting India with the rest of the world 129 IndiGo Air India Spicejet Vistara Jet Airways and Go First are the major carriers in order of their market share 130 These airlines connect more than 80 cities across India and also operate overseas routes after the liberalisation of Indian aviation Several other foreign airlines connect Indian cities with other major cities across the globe However a large section of country s air transport potential remains untapped even though the Mumbai Delhi air corridor was ranked the world s tenth busiest route by Amadeus in 2012 131 132 Airports edit nbsp Mumbai Airport Terminal nbsp Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the inauguration of Paykong Airport Sikkim Main article List of airports in India While there are 346 133 civilian airfields in India 253 with paved runways and 93 with unpaved runways only 132 were classified as airports as of November 2014 134 Of these Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi is the busiest in the country 135 136 137 The operations of the major airports in India have been privatised over the past five years and this has resulted in better equipped and cleaner airports The terminals have either been refurbished or expanded India also has 33 ghost airports which were built in an effort to make air travel more accessible for those in remote regions but are now non operational due to a lack of demand The Jaisalmer Airport in Rajasthan for example was completed in 2013 and was expected to host 300 000 passengers a year but has yet to see any commercial flights take off Despite the number of non operational airports India is currently planning on constructing another 200 low cost airports over the next 20 years 138 Length of runways Airports with paved runways 133 Airports with unpaved runways 133 3 047 m 9 997 ft or more 21 12 438 to 3 047 m 7 999 to 9 997 ft 59 31 524 to 2 438 m 5 000 to 7 999 ft 76 6914 to 1 524 m 2 999 to 5 000 ft 82 38Under 914 m 2 999 ft 14 45Total 253 93Heliports edit nbsp Pawan Hans VT PHA Helicopter As of 2021 there are 45 heliports in India 133 India also has the world s highest helipad at the Siachen Glacier at a height of 6 400 m 21 000 ft above mean sea level 139 Pawan Hans Helicopters Limited is a public sector company that provides helicopter services to ONGC to its off shore locations and also to various State Governments in India particularly in North east India 140 Water editMain article Water transport in India India has a coastline of 7 517 km 4 671 mi 141 and thus ports are the main centres of trade India also has an extensive network of inland waterways nbsp Chennai Port is the largest container port in the Bay of Bengal Ports and shipping edit Main articles Shipping Corporation of India and Ports in India nbsp Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust in Navi Mumbai ranks 25th in the world as per container traffic 142 In India about 96 of the foreign trade by quantity and 70 by value takes place through the ports 143 Mumbai Port amp JNPT Navi Mumbai handles 70 of maritime trade in India 144 There are twelve major ports Navi Mumbai Mumbai Chennai Ennore Thoothukudi Kochi Kolkata including Haldia Paradip Visakhapatnam New Mangaluru Mormugao and Kandla 145 Other than these there are 187 minor and intermediate ports 43 of which handle cargo 145 Maritime transportation in India is managed by the Shipping Corporation of India a government owned company that also manages offshore and other marine transport infrastructure in the country It owns and operates about 35 of Indian tonnage and operates in practically all areas of shipping business servicing both national and international trades The only Indian state with three ports is Tamil Nadu they are Ennore Chennai and Tuticorin 146 It has a fleet of 79 ships of 2 750 000 GT 4 8 million DWT and also manages 53 research survey and support vessels of 120 000 GT 060 000 DWT on behalf of various government departments and other organisations 147 Personnel are trained at the Maritime Training Institute in Mumbai a branch of the World Maritime University which was set up in 1987 148 The corporation also operates in Malta and Iran through joint ventures 147 The distinction between major and minor ports is not based on the amount of cargo handled The major ports are managed by port trusts which are regulated by the central government 149 They come under the purview of the Major Port Trusts Act 1963 150 citation needed The minor ports are regulated by the respective state governments and many of these ports are private ports or captive ports 150 citation needed The total amount of traffic handled at the major ports in 2005 2006 was 382 33 Mt 145 Inland Waterways edit Main article Inland Waterways Authority of India nbsp A parked vessel along the Chapora River in Goa nbsp Boats sailing on National Waterway 2 at GuwahatiIndia has an extensive network of inland waterways in the form of rivers canals backwaters and creeks The total navigable length is 14 500 kilometres 9 000 mi out of which about 5 200 km 3 231 mi of river and 485 km 301 mi of canals can be used by mechanised crafts 151 Freight transport by waterways is highly underutilised in India compared to other large countries The total cargo moved by inland waterways is just 0 15 of the total inland traffic in India compared to the corresponding figures of 20 for Germany and 32 for Bangladesh 152 Cargo that is transported in an organised manner is confined to a few waterways in Goa West Bengal Assam and Kerala 153 citation needed The Inland Waterways Authority of India IWAI is the statutory authority in charge of the waterways in India It does the function of building the necessary infrastructure in these waterways surveying the economic feasibility of new projects and also administration and regulation 154 citation needed The following waterways have been declared as National Waterways National Waterway 1 Prayagraj Haldia stretch of the Ganga Bhagirathi Hooghly River system with a total length of 1 620 kilometres 1 010 mi on 27 October 1986 155 National Waterway 2 Saidiya Dhubri stretch of the Brahmaputra river system with a total length of 891 kilometres 554 mi in 26 Oct 1988 155 National Waterway 3 Kollam Kottappuram stretch of the West Coast Canal along with Champakara and Udyogmandal canals with a total length of 205 kilometres 127 mi in 1 Feb 1991 155 National Waterway 4 Bhadrachalam Rajahmundry and Wazirabad Vijaywada stretch of the Krishna Godavari river system along with the Kakinada Puducherry canal network with a total length of 1 095 km 680 mi in 24 Nov 2008 156 157 National Waterway 5 Mangalgadi Paradeep and Talcher Dhamara stretch of the Mahanadi Brahmani river system along with the East Coast Canal with a total length of 623 km 387 mi in 24 Nov 2008 156 157 Pipelines editOil and gas industry in India imports 82 of its oil needs and aims to bring that down to 67 by 2022 by replacing it with local exploration renewable energy and indigenous ethanol fuel c Jan 2018 158 Length of pipelines for crude oil is 20 000 km 12 427 mi Length of Petroleum products pipeline is 15 000 kilometres 9 300 mi Cable editFurther information Aerial lift in India Cable transport commonly known as Ropeways in India are mostly located in mountainous areas such as in Kashmir Some of them are also located in amusement parks such Nicco Park and Science City in Kolkata Logistics editSee also Coastal Economic Zones CEZ Logistics in India ranking moved up to 35th place in 2016 from 54th in 2014 on World Bank s Global Logistics Performance Index 159 Government strategy aims to raise the share of global trade in India s GDP US 2 7 trillion in FY 2017 18 160 to 40 including half of it 20 of GDP from exports c Jan 2019 161 Cost of logistics in India is 14 of GDP which is higher than the developed nations and government reforms aim to bring it down to 10 of GDP by 2022 c Jan 2018 159 Ministry of Commerce and Industry has created a new dedicated centralised Logistics division in collaboration with Singapore and Japan to handle the logistics which was earlier handled by several different ministries such as railways roads shipping and aviation 162 To boot exports each state will have exports and logistic policy and Nodal officers will be appointed at district level c Jan 2018 161 There are 64 transactions and 37 government agencies in the end to end production to export process To further improve the ranking improve speed of logistics ease of doing business and reduce the cost of logistics India is creating a common online integrated logistics e marketplace portal that will cover all transactions in production and export connect buyers with logistics service providers and government agencies such as the customs department Icegate system Port Community Systems Sea and Air Port terminals Shipping lines Railways etc c Jan 2018 159 As part of the US 125 billion port led development project Sagarmala the government will define the regulatory framework for the Indian logistics operational standards by India s 300 dry ports logistics parks inland container depots or ICDs to the top 10 logistics international best practices nations to boost exports remove supply chain bottlenecks reduce transaction costs optimise logistics mix set up new hub and spoke dry ports c January 2018 163 To reduce the logistics costs by 10 and CO2 emissions by 12 the government is also developing 35 new Multimodal Logistics Parks MMLPs on 36 ring roads which will facilitate 50 of the freight moved in India Land has been earmarked and pre feasibility studies are underway for six of these MMLPs c May 2017 164 Confederation of Indian Industry CII and government will organise an annual national logistics convention 159 Major shippers include Container Corporation of India and Transport Corporation of India and Logistics Management magazine is one of the industry publications Modernisation editIn 1998 the Supreme Court of India published a directive that specified the date of April 2001 as deadline to replace or convert all buses three wheelers and taxis in Delhi to compressed natural gas 165 The Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation was the first state transport undertaking in India to utilise bio fuels and ethanol blended fuels 166 KSRTC took an initiative to do research in alternative fuel forms by experimenting with various alternatives blending diesel with biofuels such as honge palm sunflower groundnut coconut and sesame 167 In 2009 the corporation decided to promote the use of biofuel buses 168 In 2017 the government announced that by 2030 only electric vehicles would be sold in the country 169 It also announced that by 2022 all trains would be electric 170 In March 2020 the Government of India temporarily suspended all passenger rail metro and bus services due to COVID 19 171 See also edit nbsp India portal nbsp Transport portal nbsp Roads portal nbsp Railways portalMultimodel and internationalNorth South Transport Corridor Ashgabat agreement a multimodal transport agreement signed by India Oman Iran Turkmenistan Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan for creating an international transport and transit corridor facilitating transportation of goods between Central Asia and the Persian Gulf 172 Similar rail developmentDedicated freight corridors in India Future of rail transport in India rail 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