DMIC: Decentralization and Other Stories

DMIC: Decentralization and Other Stories

DMIC: Decentralization and Other Stories SWARNABH GHOSH Diller Scofidio + Renfro When (and if) completed, the Delhi Mumbai of Japan which is a major partner and stake- political disposition as well as a morphological Industrial corridor (DMIC) will be the larg- holder in the project. Perhaps the most chal- type that is purportedly dispersed, horizontal est and most expensive infrastructure lenging aspect of trying to unpack the DMIC is and formatted for contingency. In a country project ever undertaken in the Indian subcon- its refusal to present itself as a singular entity with some of the largest and fastest growing tinent. Stretching more than 1480 kilometers despite the deceptively straightforward ‘pyr- urban agglomerations in the world, the DMIC between New Delhi and Mumbai, the DMIC, amid’ of characters that are responsible for is a decidedly conscious change in direction termed a ‘mega-project’ in infrastructural its production and delivery. In fact, it is this from the rehearsed dialectics of urban- sub- parlance, is projected to cost well over 100 ‘looseness’ which lends the DMIC a specter- urban, center- periphery, and vertical- hori- billion dollars. The mainstay of the DMIC is a like quality - intermittently present in main- zontal. The accompanying visual material transportation ‘spine’ called the ‘Dedicated stream media and occasional drawing room constitute – (i) a series of maps which illustrate Freight Corridor’ (DFC) Connecting the two conversations, but never concrete and rarely physical relationships of the actual Corridor largest cities in India, the DFC is essentially instantiated. It is also a project where a study to various networks of extant infrastructure a high-speed rail corridor that will radically of facts, numbers, statistics and projections including ports, highways, airports and power reduce the time taken for goods to travel from is challenging as they are constantly shifting. plants, many of which will be absorbed by the the northern states to the ports on the west- This, if anything is its one most recognizable DMIC ‘influence region’; and (ii) a map of the ern coast of the country. The DMIC will also, quality – an incremental but constant refor- web-like relationships, connections and net- more importantly, build 24 new ‘smart cities’ mulation of its scope, extent and objectives, works between the myriad characters and between Delhi and Mumbai, each of which brought about by changing political land- events involved in the production of the Delhi will be calibrated to function as ‘Logistics scapes and economic considerations. Mumbai Industrial Corridor. Hubs’, ‘Investment Regions and ‘Industrial While it is obvious that the DMIC is a direct fall- Townships’. out of a particularly relentless strain of global Much of the research for this project was conducted at the Yale School of Architecture in 2014. I would like to thank The DMIC comes cloaked in possibilities and neoliberalization; for architects, urbanists and Keller Easterling for her thoughtful advice, guidance and aspirations that not only appear manifold, but geographers, it presents a more sophisticated support. in doing so, transcend political and financial category – where an apparently inordinate set ideologies with alarming ease. This research of actions contribute to the overarching goal project creates a visual cartography of the of ‘decentralization’ that appears alongside a corridor, in terms of its physical characteris- wholehearted adoption of both ‘smart-ness’ tics and qualities but also in terms of the var- and ‘city-ness’ at an immense national scale iegated relationships between the numerous administered through a set of multipolar and actors involved in its conception and execu- complex public-private models of delivery. tion. These range from the almost precogni- There are, of course, many questions. Perhaps tive involvement of McKinsey and Co. in the the first and most fundamental question one formative stages of this project, the increas- might ask is - Why and to what end? ing presence of ‘Smart City’ advocates in the In many ways, the DMIC represents the form of IBM, CISCO etc., to the Government becoming real of decentralization, both as 65 The Expanding Periphery and the Migrating Center The Japan International cooperation Agency is a government agency that is in charge of administering Japan’s Official Development Assistance (of which India is the largest bene- ficiary) which provides capital grants, Yen loans and technical support to developing countries and emerging economies. JICA (along with JBIC) have lent financial assistance to the DMIC project with the JICA having contributed close to $2 billion as of February 2014. The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan (METI) was the ‘co-organizer’ of the Indo-Japan Task Force on the DMIC in 2006. The METI and the Indian Ministry of Commerce and Industry were the two government bodies responsible for initiating the Indo- Japan partnership for the DMIC. The Ministry of Commerce and Industry, through its Department of Industrial Policy and The New Energy and Industrial Technology Promotion, is the apex body overseeing the Development Organization is an incorporated DMIC project and is also the majority share- ‘administrative agency’ overseen by the METI holder in the DMICDC (49%). and responsible for coordinating, communicat- ing and supporting power generation, clean energy projects including those that are being implemented as part of the Indo-Japan proj- ects for the DMIC. The Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation of India Ltd. (DFCCIL) is a company incorporated in October 2006, established by the Govern- ment of India to “undertake planning and development, mobilization of financial resourc- es and construction, maintenance and opera- tion of the dedicated freight corridors”. It is MEERUT-MUZAFFARNAGAR IA currently responsible for overseeing the con- struction of the Western and Eastern dedicated freight corridors. KUNDLI-SONEPAT IR The Delhi Mumbai Industrial Corridor Develop- IL&FC and IDFC, were original shareholders in ment Corporation is a corporate entity created DMICDC with holdings of 41% and 10% by the Government of India to oversee the respectively. In September 2011, the Indian development of constituent infrastructure Government proposed replacing both the projects of the DMIC which includes “develop- private shareholders with goverment-owned ing and disseminating appropriate financial corporations citing potential conflict of inter- Smarter Cities, a corporate initiative of IBM instruments, negotiating loans and advances of est. By exiting the DMICDC, both these can which utilizes IBM’s expertise and interest in all nature, and formulating schemes for mobili- compete in the bidding for DMIC projects. Beginning in July 2008, the McKinsey Global big data, data analysis and management to zation of resources and extension of credit for DADRI-NOIDA-GHAZIABAD IR provide tools and solutions to governments. Investment Regions Institute (MGI) conducted a 21 month long infrastructure”. It is, in effect, the umbrella MANESAR-BAWAL IR research project in “collaboration with the The DMICDC has selected IBM to provide organization responsible for administering and India office of McKinsey & Company” which solutions to horizontally integrate information managing the construction of the DMIC project REWARI-HISAR IA culminated in April 2010 with the publication from various departments and agencies to and its various components. Its current Chief of a paper titled ‘India’s urban awakening: monitor data related to traffic, water supply, and Industrial Areas Executive Officer and Managing Director is KHUSHKHERA-BHIWADI-NEEMRANA IR FARIDABAD-PALWAL IA Building inclusive cities, sustaining economic energy consumption, public safety in central- Amitabh Kant. growth’, which over the course of the last 4 ized facilities known as ‘Intelligent Operations years has emerged as a seminal paper in the Centers’. IBM completed the ‘digital plan’ for realm of urban growth and development. While Dighi Port Industrial Area, a Phase I project, in the paper was published after the official September 2013. announcement of the project, it is often employed to validate the claims and objectives of the various stakeholders involved in the Delhi Mumbai Industrial Corridor. It is also widely cited as a source for statistics and demographic projections by various main- stream media publications. Scott Wilson Group, a global engineering and design consultancy, based in the UK was the first consultant appointed to prepare a ‘De- tailed Perspective Plan’ for the DMIC (October 2008), which was published in June 2009. “590 million Subsequently, Scott Wilson was acquired by will live in cities, nearly twice the population of the American design, engineering and con- the United States today” struction firm URS Corporation. CISCO Systems has prepared an Information and Communications Technology (ICT) mas- terplan for four phase-I smart cities which include Shendra Bidkin (Maharashtra), Dholera JAIPUR-DAUSA IA Accenture completes the trifecta of companies SIR (Gujarat), Manesar Bawal IR (Haryana) and providing ‘smart city tools’ to the DMIC. Khushkhera Bhiwadi Neemrana IR (Rajasthan). Accenture’s involvement is more recent than CISCO will be performing a role similar to IBM with the company in talks to provide IBM’s in the Dighi Port project. logistical and technical support in the Maha- rashtra cities of the DMIC. AJMER KISHANGARH IR DELHI HARYANA RAJASTHAN AECOM, the global planning

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