Chandigarh: Smart City offers idle OFC duct on lease for telcos to lay cables : The Tribune India
Follow Us
Epaper
Login / Register
A-
A+
Updated At:Mar 15, 202311:23 AM (IST)
Cables being laid underground on Sector 29-31 road. Pradeep Tewari
Tribune News Service
Sandeep Rana
Chandigarh, March 14
The Chandigarh Smart City Limited (CSCL) has set the ball rolling to monetise its optical fibre cable (OFC) duct network on revenue-sharing model by leasing out its infrastructure to various telecom companies.
Besides earning revenue, the move is aimed at reducing damage to government utilities and inconvenience caused to general public due to repeated digging up of roads. The CSCL looks to earn Rs 25 crore under the project in the coming fiscal.
According to the Municipal Corporation, it had laid 240 km of OFC for CCTV cameras, which are connected to the Integrated Command Control Centre (ICCC), referred to as "city's brain".
At the time, two ducts were laid. While one was used for laying CCTV cables, the second had been lying unused. To monetise its vacant duct, the CSCL got approval from its Board of Directors to lease it out to various companies. An e-tender has now been invited from agencies/firms.
"The firms willing to lay cables had to pay for permission to dig up roads. We already have the duct and there will be no need to dig up holes or trenches in these sections and cause inconvenience to public. It is optional for companies," CSCL CEO Anindita Mitra told Chandigarh Tribune.
Telecom operators can use the duct to lay their cables or sublet it to another party. The CSCL will be paid on a per-km-cost basis by the highest bidder. The project has been divided into three zones.
The ducts have been laid along city's main roads, while the internal roads lack these. To connect the inner areas of sectors, the companies will have to lay cables through conventional means, which most have already done. However, there are a few that are in the process of laying their cables underground, says a senior MC official.
Interestingly, the corporation had collected Rs 12.64 crore as permission fee from various operators for laying underground cables in just three months.
This came after Chandigarh Tribune highlighted the threat of mishaps and electricity sparking due to the low-lying web of overhead cables. Following this, the civic body swung into action and started removing illegal overhead cables. It then gave an ultimatum to firms to lay cables underground, following which most applied for permission and paid the requisite fee.
While Airtel and Jio had only a handful of violations, Fastway had the maximum number of unauthorised overhead cables in the city and was in the process of laying underground cables, as per the MC official. The duct can be utilised by such companies as also new players looking to provide services in the city, adds the official.
The last date for applying for tender is March 28. The contract will initially be for 10 years and is extendable to five years.
Most wires already shifted underground
Digging fee paid to MC
Jio Fibre Rs 3.65 cr
Airtel Rs 2 cr
Fastway Rs 6.99 cr
Infrastructure meant for CCTV project
A-
A+
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER
Delhi Police to withdraw FIRs filed against wrestlers on May...
The highest increase is in moong MSP, which will be Rs 8,558...
Meeting was earlier scheduled to be held on June 12, but was...
Jeeva, an alleged aide of gangster-politican Mukhtar Ansari,...
Chanda Kochhar and her husband Deepak Kochhar were arrested ...
View All
The Tribune, now published from Chandigarh, started publication on February 2, 1881, in Lahore (now in Pakistan). It was started by Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia, a public-spirited philanthropist, and is run by a trust comprising four eminent persons as trustees.
The Tribune, the largest selling English daily in North India, publishes news and views without any bias or prejudice of any kind. Restraint and moderation, rather than agitational language and partisanship, are the hallmarks of the paper. It is an independent newspaper in the real sense of the term.
The Tribune has two sister publications, Punjabi Tribune (in Punjabi) and Dainik Tribune (in Hindi).
Remembering Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia
Designed and Developed by: Grazitti Interactive
Updated At: Most wires already shifted underground Digging fee paid to MC Jio Fibre Airtel Fastway Infrastructure meant for CCTV project