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Building Durable Roads

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As India targets the construction of over 10,000 km of highways annually, the question of cost optimisation in road construction becomes increasingly critical. Let’s discover some effective ways to build durable roads without compromising on cost, quality, safety and sustainability.

Road construction plays a vital role in infrastructure development, serving as a catalyst for economic growth, improved regional connectivity and urban development. Since April 2014, India has constructed and upgraded nearly 101,900 km of National Highways (NH). The average annual rate of highway construction from 2014 to 2024 has surged by approximately 130 per cent compared to the 2004-2014 decade. Looking ahead, the Union Government has set a bold goal of building 10,000 km of highways in the 2025-26 fiscal year.
However, despite this rapid expansion, challenges such as budget overruns, project delays and environmental impacts continue to affect the efficiency and sustainability of road infrastructure projects. Achieving cost-efficiency in this sector requires a careful balance between maintaining quality, adhering to timelines and staying within budget, all while minimising environmental impact. Contributing factors to rising costs often include inadequate project planning, limited adoption of advanced technologies and poor resource management. Additionally, while striving to meet global quality standards is crucial, it must be done without compromising financial discipline.
Hence, there is a need to explore ways to reduce costs across the road construction lifecycle – starting from planning and design to material usage, execution, and long-term maintenance – without compromising on the quality or performance of infrastructure.

Early-stage planning: The hidden lever
According to RK Pandey, former Member (Projects), National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), cost overruns often originate during the planning phase. “Planning and pre-construction activities are the two foundations for successful completion of a project,” he emphasises. “Alignment selection, land acquisition and detailed project reports (DPRs) must be approached with cost, environmental and lifecycle considerations in mind.”
The shift from brownfield to greenfield alignments, as adopted under the Bharatmala programme, exemplifies this strategic mindset. While initial costs may be higher, greenfield projects offer shorter routes, reduced congestion and lower lifecycle maintenance costs. Similarly, elevated corridors, as opposed to constructing multiple bypasses, could be a long-term solution to land scarcity and urban sprawl.
Highlighting the importance of vertical alignment choices and the need to reassess standard practices such as paved shoulder design, Pandey says, “If paved shoulders are not subjected to the same level of traffic, why must they match the carriageway in design? These are areas where rethinking standards can lead to meaningful
cost savings.”
Many experts emphasise that cost optimisation must be approached not as cost-cutting, but as intelligent engineering. “There’s a fine line between reducing costs and compromising safety,” observes Dr V Ramachandra, Director, RASTA – Centre for Road Technology.” We need industry
and policy-level mechanisms to ensure innovations in materials and methods are implemented meaningfully.”
He points out that while the Indian Roads Congress (IRC) accredits new technologies and materials, implementation remains inconsistent. A structured framework for pilot projects, followed by feedback loops and refinement of standards, is essential. “For example, alternative aggregates have been approved but unless we monitor their field performance, the industry will remain cautious,” he adds.
Dr Ramachandra also suggests incorporation of lifecycle cost analysis in tender evaluations rather than relying solely on initial construction costs. “This shift would naturally promote the adoption of durable and sustainable methods over cheaper, short-term solutions,” he opines.

The role of independent quality audits
Ensuring quality through third-party quality audits is also essential for building durable roads. Explaining the value of such assessments, Dr Manoranjan Parida, Director, CSIR-Central Road Research Institute (CRRI), says, “Third-party audits are akin to safety assessments conducted for metro or railway projects before opening to the public. They ensure compliance and help identify construction lapses early.”
He advocates for concurrent audits, conducted during construction instead of post-completion, to enable timely interventions and reduce rework-related costs. “Early detection of defects leads to significant savings, while enhancing durability and safety of the finished road,” he underlines. In his view, this is particularly important in high-value projects involving multiple agencies, where accountability and coordination can sometimes fall through the cracks.

Private-sector perspective: Optimising under constraints
As a long-time champion of PPP models, Dr Sudhir Hoshing, Chief Mentor, IRB Infrastructure Developers, provides a candid assessment of how private contractors navigate optimisation under increasingly rigid specifications. “In early BOT projects, we had the freedom to design with a 20 to 30-year maintenance horizon in mind,”
he elaborates. “Now, most designs are fixed by the authority or DPR consultants, leaving little room for innovation.”
In such cases, material substitution becomes the key lever for cost optimisation. IRB has made significant strides in this direction, with extensive use of fly ash, ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBS), steel slag and recycled materials. “We have invested in a recycling plant capable of processing 60-70 per cent RAP (recycled asphalt pavement),” shares Dr Hoshing. “That’s the kind of shift that matters.”
He insists that cost optimisation does not mean lowering quality. “A road that fails in two years is a financial disaster,” he points out. “True savings come from building durable assets using smarter processes and materials.”
The lack of flexibility in current procurement models, especially under EPC and HAM contracts, leaves little room for contractors to apply design innovations. “While PPP contracts should ideally follow output-based specifications, in India we often default to input-based design, which constrains innovation,” opines Devayan Dey, Partner, PwC India.
Dr Hoshing advocates granting of more design latitude to concessionaires, allowing them to apply value engineering techniques. “We’re often forced to include unnecessary components like roadside call boxes that are obsolete in the smartphone era,”he says. “This adds to costs without delivering value.”
Pandey concurs, suggesting that value engineering and cost optimisation should be mandatory components of DPR preparation. “Every project proposal should include a section justifying why a particular alignment, material or method was chosen over other alternatives,” he says.

Sustainable materials and the circular economy
With environmental awareness rising, there is a growing need to use industrial byproducts such as steel slag, red mud, copper slag and biochar in road construction. CRRI’s research has helped develop processing techniques and guidelines for these materials, which are now being trialled across India. Dr Parida cites the Ministry of Steel project co-developed with Tata Steel, JSW and AMNS that enabled steel slag to be used in trial stretches in Surat and Jamshedpur. “Once these materials are standardised under IRC codes, their use can be scaled nationally,” he explains.
Dr Ramachandra adds, “Bottom ash, a byproduct of thermal power plants, offers similar potential.
We generate about 35-40 million tonne annually and up to 50 per cent of it can be used in road layers. But we need guidelines and quality checks in place.” According to him, more composite cements and multi-blend mixes should be used in road construction, as they lower the carbon footprint while improving durability.
From environmental ratings to material recycling, many construction companies have taken steps in integrating ESG principles into construction. “In the past three years, IRB Infrastructure has gone from a sustainability rating of 0.7 to 52 – among the highest in the industry,” says Dr Hoshing.
Apart from material recycling, IRB has implemented water reuse systems in its hot-mix plants, installed emission control systems, and designed drainage infrastructure to store and recycle water onsite. “The use of glass fibre reinforcements and steel fibres is also emerging as an effective tool to reduce thickness and improve road performance,” he highlights.
Experts also feel that there is a need for continual revision of IRC and BIS codes to reflect field learnings.

Focus on right procurement and digitalisation strategies
Having the right procurement strategies is often considered the key for improving operational efficiency in road construction projects. Many firms have adopted centralised procurement for all major materials like steel and cement, which leads to bulk discounts and improved cash flow management. “There are also new models where vendors handle procurement and receive staggered payments from contractors, easing liquidity pressure,” elaborates Dr Hoshing. “Equipment rental models with manpower bundles also help reduce capital outlay.”

Dey suggests a three-pronged roadmap for cost optimisation in Indian road construction:

  • Design innovation: Empower private players with flexibility in design, remove rigid specifications and promote value engineering during project preparation.
  • Supply chain efficiency: Promote use of recycled and alternative materials, optimise procurement models and reduce dependency on scarce natural aggregates.
  • Technology adoption: Embrace digital tools in quality control, project tracking and asset management to boost speed, transparency and durability.

Experts agree that the next leap in optimisation would come from digital construction. Pandey predicts a move from mechanised to autonomous construction, reducing errors and improving speed.
AI-driven field inspection – where drone footage, photo annotations and speech-to-text interfaces help generate real-time progress reports – has the potential to cut down layers of bureaucracy and improve accountability. “Even requests for inspection and quality control tests can now be logged digitally,” says Dr Hoshing. “We are inching closer to real-time monitoring across the board.”
India stands at a pivotal moment in its infrastructure journey. If innovation, sustainability and engineering excellence are institutionalised across the public and private sectors, cost-effective yet world-class roads can indeed become a reality.

(This article is based on a virtual panel discussion hosted by FIRST Construction Council titled “Cost Optimisation in Road Construction” on May 16, 2025. The discussion was organised in association with CONSTRUCTION WORLD, Infrastructure Today and Equipment India magazines.)

Concrete

Nuvoco Vista Approves Bulk Cement Terminal In Gujarat

Board approves Viramgam terminal with rail siding

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Nuvoco Vista Corporation Ltd said its board has approved the setting up of a bulk cement terminal at Viramgam, Sachana in Gujarat. The proposed terminal will have a handling capacity of around one point five million tonnes per annum (mn tpa) and will include a dedicated railway siding. The facility is intended to improve unloading, storage and dispatch of both loose and packed cement.

The company said the rail connectivity and streamlined logistics are expected to position the terminal as a key distribution hub for the Gujarat market. The installation is aimed at reducing transit times and improving inventory turns while supporting distribution to trade and retail channels. The investment is presented as part of the company’s broader network optimisation.

The company indicated the project is expected to be commissioned by the financial year 2027-28. Nuvoco reported its highest-ever consolidated sales volume of 20.4 mn t in the year, representing a five per cent year-on-year rise. The firm said revenue and profitability also reached record levels, supported by improved realisations and operational efficiencies.

The premium product mix continued to strengthen and contributed 43 per cent to overall sales while the trade segment accounted for 74 per cent. Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation saw a 35 per cent year-on-year increase for the full year. For the fourth quarter consolidated volume stood at six mn t, with EBITDA up six per cent year-on-year, making it the company’s most profitable quarter.

Nuvoco Vista Corporation Ltd is described as one of India’s leading cement and concrete manufacturers with a consolidated capacity of 25 mn tpa. The company offers cement, ready-mix concrete and other building materials and intends to use the Viramgam terminal to strengthen its regional presence.

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Concrete

Cement Margins to Erode as Energy Costs Rise: CRISIL

CRISIL warns of 150–200 bps margin decline this fiscal

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Crisil Intelligence (CRISIL) released a report on April 13, 2026, indicating Indian cement manufacturers face margin erosion of 150–200 basis points this fiscal, reducing operating margins to between 16 per cent and 18 per cent. The firm noted that this represents a reversal from the prior year when margins expanded by 260–280 basis points. The analysis attributed the shift to rising input costs despite steady demand.

The report said that power and fuel, which typically account for about 26–28 per cent of production cost, are expected to increase by 10–12 per cent year on year, driven by higher prices for crude oil, petroleum coke and thermal coal. Brent crude was assessed as likely to trade between $82 and $87 per barrel, and industrial diesel prices rose by 25 per cent in March, raising logistics and procurement expenses. Such increases have therefore heightened cost pressures across the value chain.

Producers plan to raise selling prices by one–three per cent, which would put the average retail price of a cement bag at around Rs355–Rs360, according to the report. CRISIL’s director Sehul Bhatt was cited as saying that these hikes will at best offset a four–six per cent rise in production costs, leaving little room for higher profitability. The report added that intense competition and continual capacity additions constrain the extent to which firms can pass on costs.

Demand conditions remain supportive, with CRISIL projecting volume growth of six point five–seven point five per cent this fiscal on the back of accelerated infrastructure projects and steady industrial and commercial consumption. Nonetheless, the pace of recovery is sensitive to developments in West Asia, the speed of government infrastructure execution and monsoon performance. The agency noted that any further escalation in energy prices or delays in project execution would widen margin pressures.

Overall, the sector will continue to grow but with compressed margins as energy cost inflation outpaces the limited ability to raise prices. Investors and policymakers will therefore monitor both input cost trajectories and policy measures aimed at alleviating supply chain constraints.

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Concrete

Haver & Boecker Niagara to showcase solutions at Hillhead

Focus on screening tech, diagnostics and quarrying efficiency

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Haver & Boecker Niagara will showcase its mineral processing technologies at Hillhead 2026, scheduled from June 23–25 in Buxton, UK.
At Stand PA3, the company will present its end-to-end solutions including screeners, screen media and advanced diagnostics, with a focus on improving efficiency, uptime and throughput for aggregates producers.
Highlighting its screen media portfolio, the company will feature Ty-Wire media with hybrid design offering up to 80 per cent more open area, alongside FLEX-MAT® solutions designed to enhance wear life and throughput while reducing blinding and clogging.
The showcase will also include its PULSE Diagnostics suite, comprising vibration analysis, condition monitoring and impact testing, aimed at assessing equipment health and preventing unplanned downtime.
Commenting on the event, Martin Loughran, Sales Manager, UK & Ireland, said, “Hillhead presents an excellent opportunity for us to demonstrate how we deliver innovative technologies along with long-term service and technical support.”
The company will also highlight its Niagara F-Class vibrating screen, designed to reduce structural vibration and improve operational reliability under demanding conditions.
The participation reflects Haver & Boecker Niagara’s focus on supporting quarrying operations with advanced screening solutions and predictive maintenance technologies.

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