Intentar ORO - Gratis
FAST LANE TO PROGRESS
India Today
|August 26, 2024
India's ambitious infrastructure drive is transforming roads, railways and aviation while integrating climate resilience, positioning the nation for accelerated growth and global competitiveness by 2047
"It's not our wealth that built our roads. It's our roads that built our wealth." A version of this famous saying by former US president John F. Kennedy is displayed on a wall in the visitors' waiting room at the office of Nitin Gadkari, Union minister of road transport and highways. Gadkari aims to build a highway network that rivals the best in the world, significantly reducing travel time for goods and passengers, and enhancing the competitiveness of Indian industry. The highways sector receives over Rs 2 lakh crore annually for the construction, upgrade and maintenance of more than 10,000 km each year.
Over the past decade, the network has expanded by around 60 per cent to approximately 1.4 lakh km. India is already reaping the benefits of improved infrastructure, with transit time for freight trucks decreasing by about 20 per cent over the past 10 years due to better highways, expressways and electronic tolling, according to government data. The greenfield DelhiMumbai Expressway is set to reduce the 48-hour journey between the two cities to just 12 hours. A similar transformation is occurring in the Railways. Over the past decade, the government has significantly increased funding for the country's oldest transport utility. The annual outlay has risen from around Rs 53,000 crore in 2014-15 to Rs 2.5 lakh crore this year, with a 15 per cent year-on-year increase over the decade. The vision for 2047 is that it should take no more than 6-8 hours for trains or even trucks to travel between cities like Delhi and Kolkata, or Chennai and Mumbai.
MASSIVE INFRA PUSH Esta historia es de la edición August 26, 2024 de India Today.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE India Today
India Today
IS IT THE END OF CAVIAR AND TRUFFLES?
There has been a fascinating shift in the world of high-end gastronomy, with a dethroning of truffles, caviar and foie gras as the ultimate symbols of culinary luxury. As tastes evolve and chefs push creative boundaries, a new set of “it” ingredients is emerging, redefining what it means to dine extravagantly.
4 mins
January 19, 2026
India Today
Enough Is Enough
Operation Sindoor demonstrated India's willingness and resolve to use military might if necessary in response to terrorist attacks orchestrated by the enemy on its soil
2 mins
January 19, 2026
India Today
INDIA ON A PLATE
Masala Code in Indore is redefining the city's fine-dining scene with its elevated homage to the regional cuisines of India.
1 mins
January 19, 2026
India Today
NO HORSE PLAY
The new year may or may not usher in a slew of resolutions, but what it does promise is a host of watch iterations dedicated to the Chinese Zodiac.
1 min
January 19, 2026
India Today
On Top of the World
Each of the women cricketers in the team crowned world champions has won battles on and off the field. Coming from the depths of a developing India, their journeys held the nation in thrall
2 mins
January 19, 2026
India Today
WAS 2025 THE YEAR OF GADGETS?
Explore high-tech luxury with this year's smartest gizmos that save time, space and sanity.
2 mins
January 19, 2026
India Today
Special Intensive Role
Efforts to clean voter rolls through the Special Intensive Revision made Gyanesh Kumar a constant political target, as reform collided with mistrust and Opposition resistance
2 mins
January 19, 2026
India Today
THE X FACTOR!
Jean Touboul, CEO, Pernod Ricard India, on building India's first unified premium spirits portfolio with the its latest and most progressive spirits launch.
3 mins
January 19, 2026
India Today
NOT JUST FOR LAUGHS
VIR DAS's memoir reveals the person behind the smiling mask of a stand-up comic
2 mins
January 19, 2026
India Today
On a Wing and a Long Prayer
An Air India flight's crash in June and IndiGo's meltdown in December laid bare how India's aviation sector is becoming a victim of escalating ambition, weak oversight and regulatory lapse
2 mins
January 19, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
