Singhvi says the model is an important iNITIative towards developing bankable contracts. One of the things that ensures that the revenue sharing is in accordance with the agreement is the provision of an escrow account where money flowing from ticket sales and other commercial revenue will be deposited.
The transport authority will be in-charge of both fare fixation and collection, but there will be a fixed order in which withdrawal can be made from the escrow account. Payment of taxes due on operator for the project gets the first right, then comes payments relating to construction of the project, O&M (operation and maintenance) expenses incurred by operators subject to a ceiling set in financing agreements and the rest— O&M expenses incurred by the authority, monthly proportionate provision of debt service, all payments and damages certified by the authority and payable to it by the operator, monthly proportionate provision of debt service payments in respect of subordinated debt and finally the reserve requirement set forth in the financing agreements.
The opex model has a per kilometre fee which the operator will get. At the time of bidding itself, this fee will be quoted along with a guaranteed minimum kilometre. According to Satyam, city bus requires an average run of at least 200 km daily to be viable.
Singhvi says the model still has to go through a couple of iterations before it can meet varying requirements of cities. The draft model has similarity with the contract for Delhi Intermodal Transit System’s cluster buses, which according to Singhvi, has worked well for CNG buses, and, can be adapted for electric bus fleet induction, too. Under the Delhi model, only one operator is given a cluster of routes identified by the transport authority, which means one operator runs buses in one cluster.
The model also lays out explicit conditions for revision in fee. The operator will be entitled to that if the price per kilowatt hour (unit) of electricity consumed for the charging infrastructure varies by 10 per cent within a period of six months from the previous fee review. This means changes in the power tariff will be reflected in the fee paid to the operator.