Transportation in India

 Transportation in India

Indian geography represents a multipurpose transport network. Highways, railways, airways, and waterways feature as its predominant transportation networks in India to ferry goods and people in, around, and across the country.

In fact, transport is a pivotal means to connect people and services located in far-off places. Or else put it, transport in India is a boon that caters to socio-cultural and economic exchanges between its various states, union territories, and international borders.

This article discusses the different modes of transportation in India. It details the roadways, railways, waterways, and airways as the primary means of transportation within and across the nation.

Modes of Transportation in India

1. Roadways

image sources: By This Image was created by User:PlaneMad/Wikimedia. https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=900243


  • Roadways began during the time of the Mughal Emperor Sher
  • Shah Suri built roads between Indus Valley in the northwest to the Sonar Valley in the east.
  • At present, roadways in the country are managed by the National Highway Authority of India (NHAI in 1995)
  • National Highways comprise 1.6%of the total road strength in India
  • There are 228 national highways in the country
  • The state of Uttar Pradesh constitutes the highest length of national highways in India
  • Indian roadway system also connects it with its neighboring countries
  • The Border Road Organization (1963) regulates the International Highway Borders of India.
  • The World Bank finances the International Border authorities.
  • India has one of the largest road networks in the words (42.3 lakh km).
  • Roadways in India carry 85% of passengers and 70% of the traffic.
  • It was renamed the Grand Trunk (GT) during the British era, connecting Calcutta and Peshawar.
  • The National Highways contribute around 40% of the road traffic.
  • The State Highways constitute 4% of the total road length.
  • District roads contribute 60.83% of the total length of roads in India.
    80% of the roads in India are rural roads.
  • Kerala features the highest road density (517.77 km) while Jammu and Kashmir have the lowest road density (12.14 km).

Highways of India

Some of the famous highway connectivity’s in India are listed hereby:

Highway

Route

NH 1

Delhi-Ambala-Jalandhar-Amritsar-Indo-Pak Border

NH 1A

Jalandhar-Madhopur-Jammu-Banihal-Srinagar-Baramula-Uri

NH 1B

Batote-Doda-Kishtwar-Sinthan pass – Khanabal

NH 1C

Domel to Katra

NH 1D

Srinagar-Kargil-Leh

NH 2

Delhi-Mathura-Agra-Kanpur-Allahabad-Varanasi-Mohania-Barhi Palsit-Baidyabati-Bara-Calcutta

NH 2A

Sikandra to Bhognipur

NH 2B

Burdwan – Bolpur road (via Talit, Guskara, and Bhedia)

NH 3

Agra-Gwalior-Shivpuri-Indore-Dhule-Nasik-Thane-Mumbai

NH 4

Junction with National Highways No. 3 near Thane-Pune Belgaum-Hubli-Bangalore-Ranipet-Chennai

NH 4A

Belgaum-Anmod-Ponda-Panaji

NH 4B

Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust near Km 109-Palaspe

NH 5

Junction with National Highways No. 6 near Baharagora-Cuttack Bhubaneshwar-Visakhapatnam -Vijayawada-Chennai

NH 5A

Junction with National Highway No. 5 near Haridaspur-Paradip Port

NH 6

Hajira-Dhule-Nagpur-Raipur-Sambalpur-Baharagora-Calcutta

NH 7

Varanasi-Mangawan-Rewa-Jabalpur-Lakhnadon-Nagpur-Hyderabad-Kurnool-Bangalore-Krishnagiri-Salem-Dindigul-Madurai-Cape-Kanyakumari

NH 12

Jabalpur-Bhopal-Khilchipur-Aklera-Jhalawar-Kota-Bundi-Deoli Tonk-Jaipur

NH 18

Junction with NH 7 near Kurnool and Nandyal to Cuddapah and Junction with NH 4 near Chittoor

NH 19

Ghazipur-Balia-Patna

NH 20

Pathankot -Mandi

NH 21

Junction with National Highway No. 22 near Chandigarh-Ropar-Bilaspur-Mandi-Kullu-Manali

NH 22

Ambala to Indo China Border near Shipkila

NH 23

Chas-Ranchi-Rourkela-Talcher- Junction with National Highway No. 42

NH 24

Delhi- Bareilly-Lucknow

NH 27

Allahabad to Mangawan

NH 29

Gorakhpur to Varanasi

NH 30

Junction with NH 2 near Mohania and Patna to Bakhtiyarpur

NH 55

Siliguri to Darjeeling

NH 56

Lucknow to Varanasi

NH 58

Delhi to Mana Pass

NH 79

Ajmer-Nasirabad-MP border

NH 151

Karimganj – Bangladesh Border

NH 152

Patacharkuchi-Bhutan border

NH 153

Ledo – Lekhapani – Indo / Myanmar – Border

NH 233

The highway starting from India/Nepal border (connecting to Lumbini) via Naugarh, Siddharthnagar, Bansi, Basti, Tanda, Azamgarh and terminating at Varans

 

In addition to the above National Highways, India also commissions the construction of famous roadway projects. A highlight of these projects is mentioned below:

Golden Quadrilateral connecting Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai (a six-lane highway project)
2. The east-west corridor connecting Silchar and Porbandar
3. The north-south corridor connecting Srinagar and Kanyakumari

  • Apart from central highways, the state government and small districts (60.83% of the total road strength) also commissioned the construction of useful highways within the states. Maharashtra features the highest length of the state and district-installed highways in the country.
  • The Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojna (PMGSY; 2000) issues village authorities the power to construct local highways linking villages and the cities.
  • Further to the above, the country also launched a project Bharatmala to construct a highway from Gujarat to Mizoram. This highway stretches at a distance of 5300 km.
  • Setubharatam is expected to build 400-500 over bridge roads in the country.
  • Rashtriya Rajmarg Zila Sanjoyokta Pariyojana connects around 100 districts across India.
  • NH44 (3745 km) is the longest national highway in India.
  • NH47A (6 km) is the shortest national highway in India

Major Corridor Projects of India

 

 

 

Amritsar-Kolkata

Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Bihar, Jharkhand & WB

Wholly by GOI, funded by WB

Mumbai Bengaluru

MH, Karnataka

Britain

Chennai-Bengaluru

Karnataka, TN, Andhra (Rayalaseema region)

JICA (Japan International Cooperation Agency)

Delhi Mumbai (launched & Biggest)

UP, Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Maharashtra.

 

 

Problems of Road Sector in India

  • Involves high risks as roads are frequently prone to accidents
  • Involves large scale land acquirements due to construction of toll booths
  • Environmental and rehabilitation concerns of the displaced population
  • Massive traffic risks
  • Profit demands of private investors
  • Time-consuming constructions
  • Economic returns come after a long duration
  • Usually, deter private investments

2. Railways in India

image sources: By sa PlaneMad/Wikimedia https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1169018

  • Railways in India are found in three gauges:
    1. Broad gauge: 70.72% (1.675 m)
    2. Meter gauge: 92% (1 m)
    3. Narrow gauge: 5.36% (0.61 and 0.62 m)
  • Duronto Express is the fastest train in India (known as restless in Bengali)
  • Railways in India is divided into 16 zones covering a stretch of 63,221 km

The Railway headquarters of the different railway’s divisions are mentioned below:

 

 

Central Railways

Mumbai Central

Northern Railways

Baroda House, New Delhi

Eastern Railways

Kolkata

Western Railways

Mumbai Churchgate

Southern Railways

Chennai Central

North Central Railway

Allahabad

East Central Railway

Hajipur

West Central Railway

Jabalpur

South Central Railway

Secunderabad

 


In addition to dedicated railways, India also features a network of rapid metro trains in selected states and cities.

The first rapid metro in India begun in Kolkata

Other states and union territories with metro services are Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Jaipur, Chennai, and Gurgaon.

Project Bharatmala

  • A road stretching along India’s vast west-to-east approximately 5300km, from Gujarat to Mizoram
  • It connects it to a road network in coastal states, from Maharashtra to Bengal
  • This is a road network in the garland territory of India
  • The Bharat Mala plan has a strong strategic component
  • It’s India’s attempted answer to improve reach and linkage in border areas, at par with China

3. Airways in India

image sources: By Raj6644 - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=11138454

  • Initiated in 1911 over a short distance of 10 km between Allahabad and Naini
  • The Airport Authority of India manages the Indian Airways
  • Airways got nationalized (Indian Airlines/Air India) in the year 1953
  • Pawan Hans features a helicopter service in India to connect the states and districts of the northeast.
  • There are 125 airports in India
  • The Indian aviation industry has made air travel cheaper
  • The authority provides registration to all functional aircrafts
  • It also grants approval certificates to the aircraft holding agencies
  • Licensing of pilots, flight maintenance, and technical issues are dealt with by seasoned engineers
  • Licensing of aircraft controllers
  • Certification of aerodromes
  • Investigation of air services in case of accidents and emergency
  • Motivating indigenous designs and aircraft manufacturing

4. Waterways in India

image sources: By Raj6644 https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=11138454

  • Managed by the Inland Waterways Authority of India (IWAI)
  • Only the central government undertakes jurisdiction or waterways projects in India
  • Waterways comprise a total of 1% of transportation in India
  • It stretches along with a distance of 14500 hm across the country

The major waterway connectivity’s in India are as follows:

Inland Waterways Number 

Linkages 

1

Ganga- Bhagirathi- Hooghly river system

2

Sadiya-Dubri stretch in Brahmaputra river system 

3

West coast canal- Champakara canal- Udyogamandal canal

4

Kakinada- Godavari- Krishna river system

5

Talcher- Paradip in Odisha

6

Lakhipur- Banga- Barak river system (proposed) 

 

River Interlinkages in India

  • The National Water Development Agency recognizes 14 links under the Himalayan Component and 16 under the one for Peninsular Rivers. From these, the top 5 projects are:
  • Ken-Betwa
  • Parbati-Kalisindh -Chambal
  • Damanganga-Pinjal
  • Par-Tapi-Narmada
  • (Polavaram)-Krishna (Vijayawada)

Project Sagarmala

  • The objective is to improve Maritime services in India
  • Port direct and indirect growth and development
  • Furnish decent infrastructure for transportation
  • Frames appropriate policies to accomplish its objectives
  • Provides good institutional frameworks for collaborations
  • Advances integrated development
  • Effective evaluation of portlands
  • Two major ports under this project are Sagar, West Bengal, and Dugarajapatnam, Seemandhra.

Project initiatives are mentioned hereby:

  • Port-led industrialization
  • Port-based urbanization
  • Port-based and coastal tourism and recreational activities
  • Short-sea shipping coastal shipping and Inland Waterways
  • Transportation
  • Shipbuilding, ship repair, and ship recycling
  • Logistics parks, warehousing, maritime zones/services
  • Integration with hinterland hubs
  • Offshore storage, drilling platforms
  • Specialization of ports in certain economic activities such as energy, containers, chemicals, coal, agro products, etc.
  • Offshore Renewable Energy Projects with base ports for installations

Indian Ports

The list of major Indian ports in India is as follows:

States

Ports

Mumbai

Natural harbor & biggest port of India (Gateway of India)Handles approx. 1/5th of India’s foreign trade.

Nava Seva     

Jawaharlal Port (Highly Mechanized Port),  Mumbai

Chennai

Oldest artificial harbor on east coast  & 2nd largest port in terms of volume of traffic

Ennore

1st corporate port (To release pressure on Chennai port)

Tuticorin (TN)

On the Eastern coast of India

Kandla

Tidal Port (To release pressure on Mumbai port, developed after the partition of India), Gujrat

Kochi

A natural harbor

Visakhapatnam

Deepest artificial harbor on the east coast

Kolkata

Riverine Port (Handles goods coming from SE Asian countries Australia & New Zealand)

Haldia

Developed on river Hooghly to relieve pressure on Kolkata port

Paradip

Located on Orissa coast

Mormugao

In Goa ( 5th in total traffic handled)

New Mangalore

On New Mangalore

 

Pipelines in India

  • The pipeline transport network is a new sort of transportation in India.
  • In the past, these were used to transport water to cities and industries.
  • Now, these are used for transporting crude oil, petroleum products, and natural gas from oil and natural gas fields to refineries, fertilizer factories, and big thermal power plants. The initial cost of laying pipelines is high but subsequent running costs are minimal.
  • Additionally, It rules out trans-shipment losses or delays.

There are three significant networks of pipeline transportation in India

  • From oil fields in upper Assam to Kanpur (Uttar Pradesh), via Guwahati, Barauni, and Allahabad.
  • From Salaya in Gujarat to Jalandhar in Punjab, via Viramgam, Mathura, Delhi, and Sonipat.
  • The gas pipeline from Hazira in Gujarat connects Jagdishpur in Uttar Pradesh, via Vijaipur in Madhya Pradesh.