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MARITIME INDIA SUMMIT 2016 MARITIME INDIA SUMMIT 2016

MARITIME INDIA SUMMIT 2016 - PowerPoint Presentation

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MARITIME INDIA SUMMIT 2016 - PPT Presentation

Anchored for Growth 14 16 April 2016 wwwmaritimeinvestin MARITIME INDIA SUMMIT 2016 Vision Maritime Sector has a vital role in Indias progress amp Government is strengthening the sector through innovative initiatives ID: 575916

port maritime amp development maritime port development amp april shipping 2016 waterways ports coastal inland investment inr sessions sector

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Slide1

MARITIME INDIA SUMMIT 2016

Anchored for Growth

14 – 16 April, 2016www.maritimeinvest.in

MARITIME INDIA

SUMMIT

2016 Slide2

Vision

“Maritime Sector has a vital role in India’s progress & Government is strengthening the sector through innovative initiatives”

“Shipping

is just not ferrying of goods and passengers. It is all about the growth of the nation as it promotes trade.”

cx

Shri Narendra Modi

Hon’ble Prime Minister of India

Shri Nitin

Gadkari

Hon’ble Minister of Shipping

Road Transport & Highways

2Slide3

Maiden effort for holistic development of coastal

and inland waterways

Why now ?

Rich

heritage of maritime

trade Rivers were lifeline of Indian

economy, ports were gateways

Trade and cultural ties with Asia and Africa by maritime route

Ports such as

Tamralipta

,

Poompuhar

,

Muziris

, Calicut and

Dwarka

Increasing

role of India in modern global trade – exports

to grow through Make

in India

Robust growth in economy

, poised to take full

advantage of lower logistics costs by water routes

Successful model for private sector participation

Objective

Create

awareness of untapped potential of the

sector

Engage all stakeholders on the roadmap for coastal and waterways development

Showcase

tangible investment

opportunities and attract investors

New ports and port expansion

Road and rail connectivity

Inland waterways

Coastal industrial clusters

Maritime tourismSlide4

Event Details

Date: 14 -16 April

2016

Inauguration by Hon’ble Prime Minister of India

Venue: Bombay Convention & Exhibition Centre- Goregaon, Mumbai

Website launched: www.maritimeinvest.in

Summit Inaugural: 14 April

at 10 am

Valedictory Session: 15 April at 04 pm

Exhibition & Product Demo: 14

to 16 April, 2016

Thematic

Sessions:

14

and 15

April, 2016

CEOs’ Conclave: 14 April 2016

Seminar on Maritime Security: 15 April 2016

3Slide5

Program Structure

Day 1 (14 April, 2016)

Thematic Sessions: Sagarmala, Ship Building, Ship Repair and Ship Breaking, Maritime Education, Training & Skill Development

Partner

Country Special Sessions (South Korea, Singapore, Norway)

CEOs’ Conclave

Day 2

(

15

April, 2016

)

Thematic

Sessions: Inland

Water

Transportation and Coastal Shipping, Hinterland

Connectivity & Multi-Modal

Logistics,

Opportunities

in International Shipping & Maritime

Financing,

Cruise

Shipping & Lighthouse

Tourism, Island

Development & Aquatic Resources

Seminar on Maritime SecurityFocus Sessions on Maritime States in India on both daysSigning of Business Agreements/ LOIs/ Concession Agreements on both days

4Slide6

Coastal Shipping

12

The

Opportunity

Cost

for coastal shipping is INR 0.15-0.2 per

tonne km compared to INR 1.5 for railways and INR 2.5 for roadCoal, cement, POL, food grains, steel and fertilizers are the key commodities with significant growth potential

Potential to lower logistics cost in the economy by INR 21,000-27,000 Cr by 2025

Coastal shipping can be a catalyst for coastal industrial clusters

Food

Grains

Steel

Cement

Coal

FertilizerSlide7

Inland Waterways

Dhamra

Kolkata/Haldia

Machilipatnam

Paradip

National Waterway 5

National Waterway 4

National

Waterway 2

National Waterway 1

Reduce

logistics

cost of inland transport, relieve congestion on roads and railways

Support manufacturing activities in hinterland states

4 waterways currently under development:

Ganga,

Brahmaputra,

Mahanadi, Buckingham Canal

NW1 already in use for coal transport from

Haldia

to

FarakkaSlide8

Why Invest in India ?

One of the fastest growing large economies in the world with GDP growth rate of 7.5% in 2015-2016

4th most attractive FDI destination in the World as per UNCTAD

Tonnage of Indian ships

has crossed

10 million DWT

with potential of more investment

Long

coastline

of 7,517 km and navigable

inland waterways

of

14,500

km offering immense potential for maritime sector development.

7

Opportunities for investment of USD 19 Billion (INR 1.14 Lakh Crores) in Inland Waterways development & USD 50 Billion (INR 3 Lakh Crores) in Port-led Development under ‘Sagarmala’Slide9

Key Enablers : Fiscal Incentives

70% abatement in Service tax incidence on coastal shipping

Up to 100% FDI through automatic route in port development

“Infrastructure status” to Shipyards

Shipbuilding subsidy

Rationalizing taxes & duties

Tax

holiday for 10 consecutive

years

for infrastructure

development

Cruise Shipping:

SOPs for faster immigration, port and customs clearance

E

xemption

of customs duty and central excise duty on inputs used in ship building and ship

repair

8Slide10

‘Sagarmala’ Project: Port-led Development

9Slide11

‘Sagarmala’ – Linking Ports and Industrialization

10

Capacity required to handle cargo

to increase from ~1Bn

MTPA

to 2.5

Bn MTPA by 2025Slide12

‘Sagarmala’ – Linking Ports and Industrialization

11Slide13

Investment Opportunities under ‘

Sagaramala’

New greenfield ports

New berths in major ports

Number of projects

6 ports

14 energy and material clusters

13 discrete clusters

Maritime

t

ourism

Port linked clusters

Multimodal logistic hubs

Roads, railways, pipelines

70+ roads, rail and pipeline projects

Inland waterways

17 potential domestic circuits identified

52 projects

7 dry ports

4 priority inland waterways

Type of projectsSlide14

Proposed Business Agreements during MIS 2016

12

Signing of Business Agreements

will be carried out during

two sessions on 14 April from 5:30-6:30 pm15 April from 2:30-3:30 pm

Major Ports and Other organizations and Maritime States will sign Business Agreements during these sessions.Private Sector Companies

(Port Developers/Operators, Ship Liners, Dredging companies etc.) will announce their investment plans during these sessions. Slide15

Business Agreements during MIS 2016

13

Sector

No. of Projects

Proposed Investment

(in USD Millions)

Proposed Investment

(in INR Crores)

Port Development

41

3,703

22,218

Port Modernisation

17

858

5,148

Port Connectivity

11

250

1,500

Shipbuilding

8

903

5,418

Port Led Industrialisation

7

4,207

25,242

Dredging

7

195

1,170

Inland waterways

7

236

1,416

New port Development

2

1,718

10,308

Others

(Coastal Shipping, Green Initiatives in Ports, Maritime Tourism, Maritime Education)

9

74

444

109

12,144

72,864USD 12 Billion(INR 72,000 Crore)In addition, more than 150 projects will be showcased for investment under ‘Sagarmala’Slide16

Partners & Key Contacts

14

Dr. Alok Srivastava, IASAdditional Secretary, Ministry of Shippingsrivastava.alok@nic.in

+91 11-2373 6125Mr. Barun Mitra, IASJoint Secretary (Shipping), Ministry of Shippingbarunmitra@nic.in

+91 11-2335 6712Mr. N. Muruganandam, IASManaging Director, Indian Ports Association

md.ipa@nic.in +91 11-2436 5632

Contact Details

Event Partners

Knowledge PartnerSlide17

MARITIME INDIA SUMMIT 2016

Thank YouSlide18

Investment Opportunities to be showcased

16

Sector

No. of Projects

Proposed Investment

(in USD Millions)

Port Connectivity

62

25,553

Cluster Development

25

13,300

Port Development

57

12,950

Port Led Industrialisation

6

7,688

Port Modernisation

26

1,673

New port Development

2

1,002

Shipbuilding

12

822

Inland waterways

20

660

Others

(Dredging, Coastal Shipping , Green Port Initiatives , Maritime Tourism , Maritime Education)

28

1,136