Skip to main content

Exhbition bC India will benefit from highway construction spending

After a slowdown in road projects last year, the road construction sector in India has picked up in 2012. With the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) awarding new projects under the public-private partnership (PPP) programmes and the their execution picking up, the Indian construction industry is looking at making up for lost time with a flow of funds and EPC (engineering, procurement and construction) contracts in 2012. The effect of the sudden surge in demand for construction machinery, building
December 21, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
After a slowdown in road projects last year, the road construction sector in India has picked up in 2012.

With the 292 National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) awarding new projects under the public-private partnership (PPP) programmes and the their execution picking up, the Indian construction industry is looking at making up for lost time with a flow of funds and EPC (engineering, procurement and construction) contracts in 2012.

The effect of the sudden surge in demand for construction machinery, building material machines, mining machines and construction vehicles is being witnessed in the participation of Indian and global players at 1260 bC India. The 688 Bauma/3485 Conexpo show expects to feature around 700 exhibitors and over 40,000 trade visitors from around the world (5-8 February 2013 at the Bandra Kurla Complex in Mumbai). Its 2011 premiere attracted 508 companies from 36 countries and 24,823 visitors from 71 countries.

Against this backdrop, the NHAI awarded about 4,375km of roads in the first nine months of 2012 as against 4,553km during 2011. The third quarter of 2012 saw about 1,898km of projects being awarded.

Notably, the new road projects are part of the Rs. 3 lakh crore (US$70 billion) National Highways Development Program (NHDP) aimed at developing 50,000km of national highways in seven phases by 2015. Event organisers says that as the market gears up to the sudden surge of new road projects, EPC contractors and construction equipment companies are struggling to maintain their order book growth.

The sector is showing increased interest in ready-made platforms that share technology updates in construction equipment from across the world. Indian and international construction equipment players are hence exhibiting at bC India 2013, to showcase their equipment and attract buyers from the Indian construction industry.

“Looking at participation at bC India, it is clear that new domestic companies are planning to make forays into road construction, and the Indian market will witness the entry of international companies,” says the organisers.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • India's road safety management innovations
    February 27, 2012
    Rohit Baluja is a man with a mission, and that is to help reduce the grim accident toll on India's roads, the worst in the world. Baluja, a shoemaker by trade, has been studying for a PhD in civil engineering, and this has involved regular trips to Birmingham, UK, to complete his doctorate. All this seems far removed from 18 years ago when in December 1991, using much of his own money, he founded the Institute of Road Traffic Education (IRTE), the only organisation in India that conducts accident investiga
  • Upbeat in Beijing for BICES number 15
    January 22, 2020
    This year’s BICES exhibition in Beijing showcased much machinery destined for export to emergent countries that are taking advantage of China’s Belt and Road Initiative
  • Dates and venue announced for the UK’s Plantworx show
    February 16, 2018
    Plantworx 2019 will be held in England at the East of England Arena and Events Centre in the town of Peterborough on June 11-13, 2019. The East of England venue is a permanent exhibition centre which has hosted other ‘big machine’ events such as LAMMA - for agricultural equipment - and Truckfest.
  • XGMA’s huge production
    January 6, 2017
    Founded in 1951, XGMA produces an extensive range of construction equipment at the largest single-manufacturer industrial park in China. XGMA, otherwise known as Xiagong, is based at Xiamen in southern China and its massive facility has an annual production capacity of 50,000 units. XGMA, like many of the larger Chinese manufacturers, says that its current export levels represent around 10% of its total production output, with these machines mainly being for the emerging markets. But spurred on by the recen