Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06CALCUTTA411
2006-09-13 07:13:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Consulate Kolkata
Cable title:  

COMMUNIST WEST BENGAL OPENS FOR BUSINESS BUT A LAND BATTLE

Tags:  EINV ETRD IN ECON 
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VZCZCXRO1357
PP RUEHBI RUEHCI
DE RUEHCI #0411/01 2560713
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 130713Z SEP 06
FM AMCONSUL CALCUTTA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 1148
INFO RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RUEHRC/DEPT OF AGRICULTURE WASHINGTON DC
RUEHKA/AMEMBASSY DHAKA 0239
RUEHNE/AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI PRIORITY 1032
RUEHGO/AMEMBASSY RANGOON 0164
RUEHKT/AMEMBASSY KATHMANDU 0239
RUEHCG/AMCONSUL CHENNAI PRIORITY 0399
RUEHBI/AMCONSUL MUMBAI PRIORITY 0399
RUEHCI/AMCONSUL CALCUTTA 1406
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 CALCUTTA 000411 

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DEPT PASS TO USTR

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: EINV ETRD IN ECON
SUBJECT: COMMUNIST WEST BENGAL OPENS FOR BUSINESS BUT A LAND BATTLE
LOOMS


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 CALCUTTA 000411

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
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DEPT PASS TO USTR

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: EINV ETRD IN ECON
SUBJECT: COMMUNIST WEST BENGAL OPENS FOR BUSINESS BUT A LAND BATTLE
LOOMS



1. (U) SUMMARY: West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb
Bhattacharjee has received a vote of confidence from industry in
recent months with the announcements of various large
investments totaling several billion dollars. Foreign and
domestic corporations have publicized plans to construct new
factories, build roads, bridges, highways and gas pipelines, and
even to launch a large chain of retail stores. The scale of
these projects -- requiring significant tracts of land -- and
the CM's cozying up to big corporate investment, however, are
generating tensions within the Left, as the Left's
unreconstructed members question the impact on farmers and the
Left's traditional ideology. The opposition, while problematic,
does not appear to be slowing the pace of investment.
END SUMMARY.

--------------
Who is here, who is coming
--------------


3. (U) Over the past five years, the Communist Party of India
-- Marxist (CPM)-led Government of West Bengal (GOWB) has
cultivated investment in the IT sector. IT giants IBM and WIPRO
were initially attracted to Calcutta for its lower labor costs
compared to other major Indian cities. Those companies are
expanding and now others are planning to set up operations as
well. WIPRO has already started construction on a 40-acre
expansion with an almost doubling of staff to 5000 employees.
IBM has announced a doubling of it size to 5,000 employees as
well, and will be moving into a new 100,000 square foot facility
in the Calcutta's suburban Rajarhat New Township. Indian IT
giant Infosys is negotiating for 100 acres of land and plans to
have 5000 IT/ITES jobs in its future Calcutta facility.


4. (U) To support the burgeoning service sector, Delhi-based
property developer Unitech has commenced work on a 250-acre
multi-use development with residential, IT, hotel and convention
facilities. Unitech is partnering with the Jakarta-based
Universal Success Group. Unitech sources told ConGen that
U.S.-based Marriott Hotels would manage the state-of-the-art
convention center and five surrounding hotels.


5. (U) Investment plans are not limited to the service
industries alone. Manufacturing, a sector long moribund in the

state, was given a boost by Indian consumer electronics major
Videocon announcing its intent to invest USD 22 million for a
liquid crystal display television manufacturing unit and an
additional USD 177 million to branch out to ITES. Tata Motors,
part of the Tata conglomerate, proposes setting up a small-car
manufacturing plant at Singur, near Calcutta. TATA Motors is
targeting the emerging middle class in the region, with a newly
designed "economical" car to be priced at USD 2000. As part of
Tata's USD 222 million investment, the GOWB has arranged for
Tata's acquisition of 1000 acres of land. The company will also
establish Telco Construction Equipment factory, a subsidiary of
Tata Motors, at a cost of USD 500,000, in Kharagpur, 120 Km west
of Calcutta, for manufacturing heavy automobile equipment


6. (U) Southeast and East Asian companies are also contributing
to the investment climate. Japanese Mitsubishi Chemicals plans
to double the capacity of its petrochemical plant located in
Haldia with an additional FDI of USD 370 million. The biggest
investment in W. Bengal is coming from the Jakarta-based Salim
Group (Salim). Salim has started work on a USD 500 million,
390-acre integrated satellite township project, with full
infrastructure, facilities and public services for a
self-contained community. Salim has also broken ground on a
motorcycle manufacturing plant near Calcutta at a cost of USD
250 million.


7. (U) In July, Salim signed a memorandum of understanding with
the GOWB and the West Bengal Industrial Development Corporation
Ltd (WBIDC) to create the New Kolkata International Development
(NKID). NKID will be a large infrastructure project requiring
40,000 acres and valued at an estimated USD 4.5 billion, spread
over the next 15 years with an employment potential of 1.7
million. The Detailed Project Proposal (DPP) submitted by NKID
envisages a mega-chemical industrial estate, a multi-product
special economic zone, a small and medium enterprises industrial
estate, an expressway, bridges, townships, commercial blocks,
training institutes, a health city and a knowledge city.

CALCUTTA 00000411 002 OF 003



--------------
FDI and Plans for Infrastructure
--------------


8. (U) Poor infrastructure consistently has plagued W. Bengal's
economic progress and remains a potential bottleneck state's
future development. Recently, CM Bhattacharjee revealed his
infrastructure wish list, which included a deep-sea port, a new
international airport in Calcutta and an elevated light railway
transit system for the city. The GOI has already approved the
concept of a deep-sea port and has announced plans to upgrade
the existing Calcutta airport. However, Bhattacharjee has
expressed the desire to build a new airport on vacant land in
the southern Calcutta suburbs and, contrary to the position of
the CPM at the national-level, has said his state government
would accept 100 percent FDI in the new airport and for it to be
managed by the private sector. The project is estimated to cost
USD 267 million and will require around 4,000 acres of land.
Consultant Engineering Services, an engineering consultancy
firm, has conducted the preliminary study for this project.


8. (U) The Chief Minister is also pushing for a USD 667 million
light rail project for mass transit in Calcutta. The
Mumbai-based business tycoon Anil Ambani, together with the
French company TGV, has already submitted a proposal.


9. (U) In addition, the GOWB is establishing a 25,000-acre
Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in Haldia - about 100 miles south
west of Calcutta - that will house a petrochemical hub and a
modern township. GOI-owned Indian Oil Limited (OIL) has
expressed interest in constructing a refinery in the proposed
chemical hub.


10. (U) Large investments in retail have also been announced.
While CM Bhattacharjee and the Left, concerned that small
retailers and middlemen would be disadvantaged and possibly
unemployed, have opposed FDI in retail, no objections have been
expressed to Indian companies setting-up large retail
operations. Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries Limited (RIL)
intends to set up a chain of agro-retail stores all across West
Bengal following the model of Wal-Mart. In June, the company
submitted a detailed project report to the Chief Minister,
outlining RIL's plans to invest approximately USD 400 million to
set up over 50 retail outlets, with the complete retail backbone
of cold chain and logistics network as well as five distribution
hubs in the state. The company will source agricultural
products from farmers on a large scale and sell these through
its own retail outlets. RIL's retail plans aim at "transforming
the agro retail sector in West Bengal." The project claims it
will link farmers to consumers and facilitate the transformation
of the agro-industry in India to agro-processing. Reliance
Group will further invest an additional USD 400 million to link
its Bay of Bengal gas field (the Krishna-Godavari basin in
Andhra Pradesh and the Mahanadi basin in Orissa) to Haldia in
West Bengal.


11. (U) In June, Calcutta-based conglomerate Indian Tobacco
Company Ltd. (ITC) proposed new investments of USD 215 million
to include expansion of its hotel ITC-Sheraton Sonar Bangla and
a tobacco factory at Khidderpore in Calcutta. ITC also proposed
to set up an IT project, logistic hub, a food factory and an
agro-retail business. ITC wants to increase the number of rooms
in its hotel in the city from 237 to 300 with an investment of
USD 0.78 million. The company has sought to purchase an
additional 10 acres for the hotel facility.


12. (SBU) Comment: These recent plans by RIL and ITC Ltd and
other major retailers like Big Bazaar and RPG Group to create
retail operations and logistics networks, reflects the Indian
corporate effort to develop large scale investment in retail
while the GOI still blocks FDI in the retail sector. Clearly,
domestic corporate interest is a factor in the GOI's decision to
restrict FDI in retail. US-India CEO Forum member and Chairman
of ITC Ltd, Mr. Y.C. Deveshwar expressed a strong protectionist
stance to Treasury Under Secretary Timothy Adams against FDI in
retail during the Under Secretary's visit to Calcutta in May.
End Comment.

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CALCUTTA 00000411 003 OF 003


The Looming Land Conflict
--------------


13. (U) CM Bhattacharjee's success in attracting new, large
investments is tempered by the emerging issue of availability of
suitable land. He is also facing strong criticism from Leftist
ideologues opposed to his support for large corporations and
multi-nationals coming to the state. The CPM and its Leftist
allies came to power in the late 1970's by supporting land
reform and distribution of small plots to the rural masses.
Consolidating the land for large industrial projects runs
counter to the long held principles of the Left, and the GOWB's
bid to acquire agricultural land for corporate investors has
already met with local resistance. In June, many small-scale
farmers protested the purchase and conversion of their fertile
land for Tata Motor's small-car project. CPM officials opposed
to Bhattacherjee's industrial initiative supported the farmers.
This faction includes those with agricultural constituencies,
such as the Land and Land Reforms Minister, Mr. Abdul Rezzak
Mollah and supporters of former Chief Minister and veteran CPM
Politburo member Jyoti Basu. Mollah, wary of factories being
built on farmland, has suggested an amendment to existing land
acquisition laws. This was rejected by Commerce and Industry
Minister Nirupam Sen. [Note: Recent news reports suggest that
Maoists operating in the southern part of the state have offered
support for the small-scale farmers who oppose the government's
acquisition of land, raising concerns of violence should
negotiations become contentious. End Note].


14. (U) The CPM's Left Front partners, particularly the Forward
Bloc and RSP, have been critical of converting agricultural land
to industry. The GOWB is planning a White Paper on its new
industrial policy, which will outline the strategy behind land
acquisition for industrial projects. Contacts in the CPM
indicate that the best approach to defuse this opposition is to
ensure employment on a large scale in these factories.


15. (U) COMMENT: Starting his second five-year term as Chief
Minister, Bhattacharjee appears to be accelerating his efforts
to reform the Leftist policies of his CPM-led government and to
attract more corporate investment in West Bengal. So far, the
CM has been able to effectively push his plans for promoting
growth and investment over the opposition of the more hard-line
Leftist ideologues in his party. However, his policies will
face a real test in the villages. Farmers have expressed
objections, while some are conceding with the promise of new
jobs, but the issue could easily become more confrontational as
projects continue to be implemented and more land acquired for
industry. END COMMENT.
JARDINE