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The Ministry of Finance has prepared a public-private partnership infrastructure pipeline worth around INR 17 lakh crore for the next three financial years up to FY27-28. The pipeline includes 852 projects identified by central ministries as well as states and Union territories. The move follows the Union Budget announcement aimed at improving private sector participation in infrastructure. By sharing early details of upcoming projects, the government intends to give developers and investors better visibility for planning, financing, and execution across key infrastructure sectors.
The Finance Ministry, through the Department of Economic Affairs, has put together a detailed pipeline of public-private partnership projects valued at nearly INR 17 lakh crore, covering a three-year period ending FY27-28. The exercise was undertaken after the Union Budget highlighted the need to strengthen private participation in infrastructure development.
The pipeline consists of 852 projects across sectors such as transport, energy, urban infrastructure, water, and logistics. Of the total planned investment, projects led by the central government account for about INR 13.16 lakh crore spread across 232 projects. States and Union territories have proposed 620 projects with an estimated cost of around INR 3.84 lakh crore.
Officials indicated that the objective of publishing a structured pipeline is to provide advance clarity to private players, lenders, and investors. Early visibility is expected to help companies prepare bids, arrange financing, and plan execution timelines more efficiently. The government has also stressed that the pipeline reflects projects at different stages of readiness, rather than only concept-level proposals.
The PPP pipeline builds on earlier initiatives such as the National Infrastructure Pipeline, which was launched to improve long-term infrastructure planning and coordination between the Centre and states. While the NIP helped create a broad investment roadmap, execution delays and limited private participation in certain sectors remained challenges. The new PPP-focused pipeline is intended to address some of these gaps by clearly identifying projects suitable for private investment.
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