HomeNewsOpinionBihar Bridge Collapses: Call to improve contract management for infrastructure projects

Bihar Bridge Collapses: Call to improve contract management for infrastructure projects

Bihar has a history of bad roads and bridge construction. Though the recent news reports point to a more pan-India problem, it highlights the issue of incompetence and perhaps corruption in issuing contracts

July 12, 2024 / 11:58 IST
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Bihar has always been notorious for bridge collapses.

Bridges do collapse. However, bridges are collapsing in Bihar one after another like a pack of cards – some brand-new and others still in construction stage. In hindsight, it emerges that Bihar has always been notorious for bridge collapses. Only few years ago, a new bridge on Ganga had collapsed in Bhagalpur. Heads have already started rolling in the present spate of bridge collapses. Apart from the heavy monsoon, other excuses are also emerging. There are assurances of thorough investigation as well! Most often, it is poor contract management and monitoring that leads to such bridge collapses.

Surprisingly, this is happening in a state where not long back, one IAS officer brought paradigmatic changes in the contract management for construction of roads and bridges. Reputed national companies were making a beeline for grabbing contracts in Bihar and most road and bridge projects were constructed within the project development cycle (PDC), without any time and cost escalation. Quality assurance was an additional tag! Although, such an ephemeral phase may have been the individual brilliance and commitment of one officer. In due course, it failed to proliferate as a collegiate work ethics in Bihar.

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Bihar’s History of Bad Infrastructure

If Bihar has reverted to bad days in roads and bridge construction, it is not because of invented excuses like heavy monsoon but certain inherent local trends visible at an informal level in contract management of roads and bridges in the state. A major factor is sub-contracting of the mega contract to petty contractors and even politicians. Sub-contracting is allowed to some extent for inducing cost efficiency and time saving. But it is fast metamorphosing into ubiquitous norm than exception, without being factored in the main contract. Sometimes, there is an outright sale or outsourcing of contract to another party. Many sub-contractors and secondary contractors are simply fly-by-night contractors without substantive experience. Then, there are allegations of corruption and extortion-based economy. Consequently, the overall project does suffer in quantitative, qualitative and temporal aspects.