Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation of India


The Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation of India Limited is a Public Sector Undertaking corporation run by government of India's Ministry of Railways to undertake planning, development, and mobilisation of financial resources and construction, maintenance and operation of the "Dedicated Freight Corridors". The DFCCIL was registered as a company under the Companies Act 1956 in 2006.
First 2 DFC, Western Dedicated Freight Corridor, from Uttar Pradesh to Mumbai and Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor, Ludhiana in Punjab to Dankuni in West Bengal, which will decongest railway network by moving 70% of India's goods train to these two corridors, are both on track for completion in December 2021. 99% required land for these 2 have been acquired, and 56% of WDFC and 60% of EDFC is complete as of July 2020.
It is both enabler and beneficiary of other key Government of India schemes, such as Industrial corridor, Make in India, Startup India, Standup India, Sagarmala, Bharatmala, UDAN-RCS, Digital India, BharatNet

Historical perspective

In April 2005, wherein, India and Japan announced collaboration for feasibility and possible funding of the dedicated rail freight corridors, and RITES was entrusted with the feasibility study of both eastern and western corridors, followed by formation of a Planning Commission's Task Force to prepare a concept paper on Delhi-Mumbai and Delhi-Howrah dedicated freight corridor projects, and to suggest a new organizational structure for planning, financing, construction and operation of these corridors.
In January 2006, RITES submitted the Feasibility Study Report of both the corridors and Cabinet approved Task Force's report, Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs gave "in principle" approval to the Feasibility Study report. Subsequently, RITES submitted the PETS Report based on which the project was approved at a cost of Rs. 281.81 billion.

Dedicated Freight Corridors (DFC)

Under the Eleventh Five Year Plan of India, Ministry of Railways started constructing a new Dedicated Freight Corridor in two long routes namely, the Eastern and Western freight corridors. The two routes covers a total length of, with the Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor stretching from Ludhiana in Punjab to Dankuni in West Bengal and the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor from Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Mumbai to Dadri in Uttar Pradesh. Upgrading of transportation technology, increase in productivity and reduction in unit transportation cost are the focus areas for the project.
DFCCIL has been designated by Government of India as a 'special purpose vehicle', and has been created to undertake planning & development, mobilization of financial resources and construction, maintenance and operation of the Dedicated Freight Corridors. DFCCIL has been registered as a company under the Companies Act 1956 on 30 October 2006.

Need for DFC

of 1991 followed by Information Technology industry explosion have taken India to a new growth scenario. Backed by strong fundamentals and commendable growth in the past three to four years, the Indian Economy is hoped to grow even further. Transport requirement in the country, being primarily a derived demand, is slated to increase. The Indian Railways have witnessed higher freight volumes without substantial investment in infrastructure, increased axle load, reduction of turn-round time of rolling stock, reduced unit cost of transportation, rationalization of tariffs resulting in improvement in market share and improved operational margins. Over the last 2 to 3 years, the railway freight traffic has grown by 8 to 11%, which is projected to cross 1100 million tonnes by the end of 11th Five Year Plan.

Golden Quadrilateral Freight Corridor (GQFC)

GQFC has 6 DFCs, 2 are being implemented and the funding for the remaining 4 was approved in January 2018. The rail tracks linking four largest metropolitan cities of Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata and two diagonals North-South Dedicated Freight Corridor and East-West Dedicated Freight Corridor are called the Golden Quadrilateral. These carry 55% of the India Railway's freight traffic over a total route length. The line capacity utilization on the existing highly saturated shared trunk routes of Howrah-Delhi on the Eastern Corridor and Mumbai-Delhi on the Western Corridor varies between 115% to 150%. The surging requirement for the power generation requiring heavy coal movement, booming infrastructure construction and growing international trade has led to the conception of the GQFCs. Carbon emission reduction from DFCs will help DFCCIL claim carbon credits.
Under implementation:
  1. Western Dedicated Freight Corridor, 1,468 km from Dadri in Uttar Pradesh to Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Mumbai.
  2. Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor, Ludhiana, 1,760 km from Punjab to Dankuni in West Bengal.
Approved in January 2018
  1. East-West Dedicated Freight Corridor, 2,000 km-long from Kolkata to Mumbai
  2. North-South Dedicated Freight Corridor, 2,173 km long from Delhi to Chennai
  3. East Coast Dedicated Freight Corridor, 1,100 km long from Kharagpur to Vijayawada
  4. South-West Dedicated Freight Corridor, 890 km-long from Chennai to Goa

    Proposed Dedicated Freight Corridors

Green background for the systems that are under construction. Blue background for the systems that are currently in planning.
Dedicated Freight CorridorTrack gaugeSpeedLength RORO enabled Further ExtensionStatus--
Dedicated Freight CorridorTrack gaugeSpeedLength RORO enabled Further ExtensionStatusStart PointTermination Point
Western Dedicated Freight Corridor broad gauge100 Km/h1483YNot PlannedPartly OperationalDadriJNPT, Nava Sheva
Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor broad gauge100 Km/h1839NPartly operationalLudhianaDankuni
East-West Dedicated Freight Corridor broad gauge100 Km/h2000Announced in Budget 2016-17KolkataMumbai
North-South Dedicated Freight Corridor broad gauge2173Announced in Budget 2016-17DelhiChennai
East Coast Dedicated Freight Corridor broad gauge1100Announced in Budget 2016-17KharagpurVijayawada
South-West Dedicated Freight Corridor broad gauge890branching to Mangalore from BangalorePlannedChennaiGoa
Total9485

Conversion to high-speed corridors

Indian Railways plans to convert 10,000 km of passenger and freight trunk routes into high-speed rail corridors over 10 years with total investment of ₹20 lakh crore and an annual investment of ₹2 lakh crore from 2017–2027, where half of the money will be spent on converting existing routes into high-speed corridors by leap-frogging the technology and the rest will be used to develop the stations and electronic signaling at the cost of ₹60 thousand crore to enable automated running of trains at a frequency of 5–6 minutes. Freight corridors of 3,300 km length will also be completed, freeing the dual use high demand trunk routes for running more high-speed passenger trains.

Transformational effect on the Indian economy and railway