Skip to Main Navigation
PRESS RELEASE December 13, 2019

World Bank Approves $88 Million Project to Help Modernize Waterways in Assam, India


WASHINGTON, December 13, 2019 – The World Bank Board of Executive Directors today approved a $88 million loan to help modernize Assam’s passenger ferry sector that runs on its rivers including the mighty Brahmaputra. 

. Majority of Assam’s more than 361 ferry routes cross the Brahmaputra or serve its islands, providing a crucial means of transport to thousands of commuters in both the urban and rural areas of the Brahmaputra Valley.

The Assam Inland Water Transport Project (AIWTP), approved today, will help Assam improve the passenger ferry infrastructure and its services and strengthen the capacity of the institutions running the inland water transport. Technically better designed terminals and energy-efficient vessels (both new and retrofitted) will make the ferry services more sustainable with least disruption to nature. 

“Assam has the largest network of navigable waterways in India. The Government of Assam has taken on the challenge of modernizing the ferries sector which, though vital to the state, remains largely informal,” said Junaid Ahmad, World Bank Country Director, India. “With World Bank support, the government is creating an institutional framework that will mainstream Inland Waterways as a mode of transport that is both attractive and well-suited to a wide cross-section of people living in the Brahmaputra Valley of Assam.”

The project will support Government of Assam’s efforts to corporatize its own ferry activities. The Assam Shipping Company (ASC) will operate the government ferries and the Assam Ports Company (APC) will provide terminals and terminal services on a common-user basis to both public and private ferry operators.

It provides low-carbon and low-cost options when compared to the cost of constructing and maintaining flood-resilient roads and bridges across the long stretches of the Brahmaputra river.  

,” said Atul Agarwal, Senior Transport Specialist and Ninan Oommen Biju, Senior Port Specialist and World Bank’s Task Team Leaders for the project. “With better navigation aids, appropriate safety gear and more suitable marine engines, the ferry services are expected to get more reliable and safer,” they added.

The project will also help build modern ferry terminals. In doing so, the project will draw guidance from ‘working with nature’ principles that aim to design new infrastructure or rehabilitate existing infrastructure in a way that works with natural river processes.

Today, a quarter of all ferry passengers in the state are women and girls. The ferry terminals have few facilities, with limited seating (if any), or toilets or drinking water and most waiting areas are mostly overcrowded. Traveling on the vessels can be uncomfortable and difficult, particularly for women, children, older people, and for the differently-abled. The project will improve facilities for people using the ferry services and give special attention to the safety and security of women and girls.

The terminals will have better access, lighting and signages while the new vessels will allow for individual seats, and separate toilets. Moreover, a strengthened regulatory regime will ensure reduction in overloading, adherence to time schedule and better crew standards. 

The $88 million loan from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), has a final maturity of 14.5 years including a grace period of five years.


Contacts

New Delhi
Nandita Roy
+91-11-41479220
nroy@worldbank.org
Washington D.C.
Elena Karaban
+1 (202) 473-9277
ekaraban@worldbank.org
Api
Api