New Delhi: Despite the attorney general’s clean chit, the civil aviation ministry said it has asked Delhi International Airport Ltd (DIAL) not to go ahead with an innovative financing plan to charge high deposits and low rentals from the winning bidder for commercially developing 43 acres of land near the airport.
This was conveyed to G M Rao, chairman of the GMR Group, DIAL’s largest shareholder, and Kiran Kumar Grandhi, DIAL managing director, in a meeting on December 6.
According to ministry sources, DIAL officials have said that they will modify the scheme to ensure that the government does not lose any revenue, which could be quite substantial over the years.
A DIAL spokesperson confirmed the company was working on “different models that would be a win-win situation for both sides”.
Senior civil aviation sources told Business Standard that the ministry has directed the Airports Authority of India (AAI) to write to DIAL officially asking it not to proceed with its plan.
Meanwhile, another letter has been sent to consultants to the bidding process ABN Amro and to the legal consultant Amarchand Mangaldas, asking them to give their opinion on whether what DIAL’s revenue model was permissible under the Operation, Management and Development Agreement (OMDA).
10/12/07 Anjuli Bhargava/Business Standard
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Monday, December 10, 2007
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Govt tells DIAL not to proceed with land deal
Monday, December 10, 2007
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