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India's BRO starts process for 135-km road near LAC from Chushul to Demchok

walterbibikow

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The new road will run almost alongside the Indus River and virtually parallel to the LAC, very close to the India-China border in Leh. PTI File

A new single-lane highway of around 135 km would come up alongside the Line of Actual Control (LAC) from Chushul to Demchok in the next two years, which will act as a major strategic road for the country in a counter to China.

The Border Roads Organisation (BRO) on 23 January invited bids for constructing the Chushul-Dungti-Fukche-Demchok highway, also known as the CDFD road. The existing track will be made into a road as per the National Highway single lane standards in two years at the cost of nearly Rs 400 crore, as per the bid documents reviewed by News18.

The new road will run almost alongside the Indus River and virtually parallel to the LAC, very close to the India-China border in Leh.
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Map for the Chushul-Demchok Road Project close to the LAC.

For many decades, much of this key route has been a dirt track with questions being raised on why India has not been able to lay a medalled road here while China has ramped up road infrastructure across the Indus.

Chushul is where the 1962 battle of Rezang La was fought. Demchok is another area with a history of skirmishes between India and China. The new road will be strategic as it will enable quick movement of troops and equipment and also help tourism by converting this area into a circuit.

The 7.45-metre-wide road will involve the construction of three important bridges on it as well. The BRO completed the Detailed Project Report of this road in 2018. It invited bids in two packages for the road on Monday.

Second boost after Nyoma Airfield

This road will be the second boost for infrastructure in the Leh region after the BRO had last month invited bids for building the Nyoma Airfield in Ladakh, comprising an Advance Landing Ground where fighter planes can land.

News18 reported on 31 December that the Nyoma Airfield will act as a strategic asset and the upgraded advance landing ground will be one of the highest airfields in India and is located less than 50 km from the LAC.

This upgraded advance landing ground will be ready for fighter aircraft operations in two years at the cost of Rs 214 crore and will be located near the upcoming CDFD road. The site for the new advance landing ground will be spread over 1,235 acres, where a 2.7-km runway with allied military infrastructure will come up.
 
Perfect for the PLA troops to move in.

Make sure to build toilets as Chinese don't do it in the open.

:yahoo:
 
Work on tunnel on, Shinku La Pass to be accessible in winter too
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The Border Roads Organization (BRO) has taken on the difficult challenge of maintaining the high altitude Shinku La Pass (5,091 metres – 16,703 feet above sea level) operational even during winter months. This is because of the strategic necessity of providing year-round road access to snowbound Leh and other districts of Ladakh

According to sources, personnel and machinery are ready to maintain the connectivity of this snowbound region with other regions of the state during winter. The road used to be blocked during winter months since it was unmetalled and dangerous to negotiate for drivers, especially in areas where there was snow.

All arrangements have already been made to maintain accessibility of the Shinku La Pass for transportation all year long.

As part of “Project Yojak”, the BRO had begun building a tunnel to connect Himachal Pradesh with the Zanskar Valley in Ladakh. The tunnel is expected to be complete in 2025. The goal of the Project Yojak is to maintain the year-round operation of the Manali to Leh route via Padam.

Currently, one must drive 101 kilometres on the Leh Road from Manali to Darcha before turning from Darcha towards Shinku La Pass to enter the Zanskar region.

In addition to opening the high pass to traffic in the dead of winter, the BRO is engaged in other significant infrastructure projects nearby. The BRO is working on war footing for the double-lane of the Nimu-Padam-Daracha roads which will be complete as soon as possible.

Connectivity between Leh via Padam with the rest of the country will be of great strategic importance after the completion of the Nimu-Padam-Daracha route. Travelling by this road is one of the toughest propositions since this avalanche-prone terrain frequently leads to sections which experience 15 to 20 feet of snowfall.

According to an official, work is also in progress on a tunnel beneath the Shinku-La pass, which would provide smooth traffic movement even during the busiest winter months. The entryway from Manali to Zanskar and Ladakh is the peak known as Shinku La. The 16,703-foot-high Shinku Pass is closed in October due to snowfall and often reopens in April.

Mini bus Facility
To facilitate the residents of the Zanskar valley, Himachal Road Transport Corporation has begun operating Padam Mini Buses along the route.

A retired government employee used his funds initially to build the road.

When the passage at the high altitude is covered with snow and the temperature in Leh drops to -30 to -40 degrees Celsius, the Zanskar valley makes it almost inaccessible for locals to traverse the pass on foot. Many would lose their way or die during the trek.

After analysing the sig Chultim Chonjo, a retired government servant used his funds to construct the 17-kilometer road connecting Ramjak in Lahaul to Kargyak in the Zanskar Valley. Between May 2014 and June 2017, the road was built, aided a bit by the locals.

In 2021, Chultim Chonjo received the Padma Shri, the fourth-highest civilian award, for his contributions to society.

Later, the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) took over the control of the route. It is now a metalled road with an 18-ton truckload limit.


@SIPRA
 
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Landmark: Atal Tunnel, under Rohtang Pass is a game - changer with strategic implications it was completed by BRO

The Border Road Organisation (BRO) has a daunting task of building roads on what are probably the most challenging terrain in the world. It includes the deserts in Rajasthan, the treacherous Southern face of the young himalayan ranges, the arid high altitude beyond merging into the Tibetan Plateau and the riverine NE region which can test both patience and ingenuity to its limits. They are tasked because no one else can take this on under such extreme conditions. They contribute to security of our national borders in two distinct ways.

First is initiating development in the region; providing first connectivity to enable faster growth in both infrastructure and commerce in the area. Second is by providing better logistics to the forces deployed along the border. Both complement security in the region. Let’s understand how these two facets contribute to security and what the BRO has done towards this.

Enabling Development in Border States
The BRO has initiated and helped sustain growth in the border States by developing the first roads and maintaining them in difficult times, enabling further development in these regions. The impact of development in border areas on security is big. Economic development means better living conditions, better education, and a more stable society. It helps reduce unwanted external influences. It also promotes better integration with the rest of the country, economically, culturally, and socially. This makes the region more secure. Efficiency of the forces along the borders is also enhanced by local support- motivated people, a thriving industry, and improved local resources. Ask anyone in the forces who has fought a war along the Western Borders, and he will tell you how much, local support can be a force-multiplier. No one appreciates the BRO effort better than the locals.

Improved Logistics for the Forces

The focus today with an active Northern Border is rightly on military logistics so critical to sustaining troops ahead and enhancing their capability. It is a lesson highlighted once again in the Ukraine war. This is today, getting a real boost through BRO, and their achievements find mention in the media ever so often, as they build roads, bridges and tunnels which were long awaited. How these serve as a force-multiplier may not be fully comprehended by some.

Groundbreaking Projects
By 2022, BRO had constructed over 55,000 kilometres (34,000 mi) of roads, over 450 permanent bridges with a total length of over 44,000 metres (27 mi) length and 19 airfields in strategic locations
BRO is also tasked with maintaining this infrastructure including operations such as snow clearance
One of the biggest infrastructural achievements of the organisation is the construction of the longest highway tunnel constructed in Himachal Pradesh, named The Atal Tunnel, in memory of former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Its length is 8.8-kilometres and will be the world’s longest tunnel above 3,000 meters. It will decrease the distance between Manali and Leh by 46 kilometres and saves transport costs.
Another milestone is constructing the highest motorable road in the world at the height of 19,300 feet at Umlingla Pass in eastern Ladakh
In addition to this, the BRO has also constructed a 52-km long black-topped road through Umlingla Pass, bettering the previous record of a road in Bolivia connecting to its volcano Uturuncu at 18,953 ft
Better connectivity reduces travel time and increases loads that can be carried on any road or axis as the army would like to call some of these roads. It means faster build up at a lesser cost. When larger trucks are used on better roads, the transportation costs drop exponentially. A recent study shows transportation cost can almost be halved if four axel trucks are used as against twin axle trucks, which has been the mainstay for military logistics for long because of bottlenecks in connectivity and weak bridges. This is fast changing. Along with quicker build-up is the ability to take larger equipment further ahead. If it is a heavier gun, the fire-power reach is enhanced. If it is better monitoring equipment like radars and sensors, the surveillance cover is enhanced. Repair facilities also move up, reducing downtime of machines. With better roads, barrack-accommodation can be closer to the front line, enhancing the efficiency of troops and their morale.
With better roads, reduced turn-around for supplies to logistics areas is also a great advantage. The stocking levels can then be pruned, confident of a reliable line of replenishment. Food remains fresher, stores are more readily available. Add this to better accommodation and ancillaries and you have the man behind the machine more efficient and operating a better maintained machine.
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Defence Minister Rajnath Singh inaugurated 75 projects on October 29, 2022 built by the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) during his visit to Ladakh. These projects, including 45 bridges, 27 roads, two helipads and a carbon neutral habitat, cost Rs 2,180 crore and are spread across six border States and two UTs

At the operational level, it gives the commanders more flexibility in planning, deployment, and redeployment. And with each new road, bridge or tunnel made by the BRO, the capability is enhanced. Larger communication arteries sustain larger forces. Forward Airfields are again a strategic asset that allows aircrafts to operate over the Tibetan Plateau with more fuel and ammunition than aircrafts positioned on the plateau, as the altitude limits all-up-weight at take-off for them. All weather connectivity through tunnels like Atal tunnel (Rohtang Pass) are again game changers with strategic implications. Combined with a second tunnel at Zojila across the Greater Himalayas, it will change the face of the Ladakh region and make forces less vulnerable.

BRO in the Recent Past

Further the capability for carrying out any operation across the border can be sustained only with reliable logistics. It puts so much more pressure on the other side, just as we have felt in the past, seeing infrastructure grow across our Northern border. Better roads to support the forces ahead are truly a force-multiplier. It makes the man and the machine capable of more. It gives commanders more flexibility in planning and execution. Together it is a battle winning factor.

In enabling better logistics, the task of the BRO gets more challenging as they get closer to the borders. The degree of difficulty increases with altitude, more extreme temperatures, and more challenging terrain. The BRO’s achievements in the recent past are even more commendable considering this. The list is long.

The growing tally as of now is nearly 60500 km of roads, 893 bridges, 19 Airfields and 18 Km of tunnels. The numbers have grown rapidly in the recent past. In the last one year the Raksha Mantri has inaugurated a total of 103 BRO projects, 28 (costing 724 Cr), were inaugurated in Jan 2023. This spans across all the Border States.

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The blast of the 1 km Sela Main Tunnel was done in 2022 under Project Vartak of the Border Roads Organisation (BRO), Tezpur in the West Kameng district of Arunachal Pradesh.It is a momentous occasion for the nation and the BRO as this marks the culmination of all major excavation of the prestigious Sela Tunnel Project, which will prove to be a boon for connectivity of Tawang

Tunnels have been greatly speeded up of late. Close on the heels of the completion of 9.2 Km Atal Tunnel (Rohtang), in Oct 2020, the tunnels in the NE are also reaching completion. On the 317 Km Balipara-Chardwar-Tawang Road, the 5 Km Sela Tunnel is likely to be completed later this year. A 500m Nechipu tunnel under the Eagles Nest Wildlife Reserve is likely to be completed in March, both together bringing Tawang closer to the State capital Itanagar and speeding up logistics to the Tawang Region.

In J&K work on the Z Morh Tunnel to reach Sonamarg and then the Zojila Tunnel through the Greater Himalayan Range are in progress. The feasibility studies had earlier been carried out by the BRO and the construction handed over to the NHIDCL. But BRO continues to work closely with them to keep the approaches open as NH 1 from Leh to Srinagar is on their charge. The Zojila Pass is still in use and would normally close from November to June each year due to snow in winter. With the LAC active, it was decided to reduce the period of closure. Both in 2022 and in 2023, the Pass has been kept open till the first week of January, despite the temperatures being minus (-) 25° C at an altitude of nearly 11500 ft (3450m). Over 13500 additional vehicles have been able to ply this year, due to this, which has helped troops beyond Leh be better stocked for winter.

The BROs response to a crisis has always been remarkable. Their performance under extreme challenges has been proven repeatedly, showing them once again as the ‘Best under Extremes’. Their contribution towards enhancing security along the borders is truly invaluable.
 
India begins work on 135km Ladakh road to link key locations

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India has started building a strategic road along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh, according to a report in the Times of India.

As per the report, the road will, for the most part, trace the Indus and mirror a blacktop surface link on the Chinese side.

The proposed road is being built from Chushul south of Pangong Tso and Demchok in eastern Ladakh. The Border Roads Organisation started the work on Republic Day and aims to complete the project in two years.

Replacing the present iron bridge across Indus at Loma with a concrete bridge in the vicinity will allow easy movement of heavy military gear to the heart of eastern Ladakh, one of the two areas where the border stand-off is yet to be settled

"Chushul has three blacktop links to Leh. Two of them converge on Tangtse from where the road goes on to Leh via Chang La (pass). Another road links up with the Nyoma-Leh road in the east at Mahe. But from Chushul, the road till Loma bridge on Indus is mostly unpaved or eaten up by shifting sand. Across the Loma bridge, it is purely off-road through a vast, empty stretch of gravelly surface interspersed with sandy stretches. The blacktop alternative to Demchok from Loma is through Hanle but it means going across the 19,023-foot-high Umling La after climbing the 18,000-plus foot-high Photi La," the report said.

The road will provide rapid access to the Tibetan refugee settlement of Dungti overlooking ITBP’s Hena post, and the advance landing ground at Fukche.

It is also expected to help promote tourism in the area if the forces allow tourists to venture into these areas.

@Raj-Hindustani @Hecig @VkdIndian @INDIAPOSITIVE @LakeHawk180 @etylo @beijingwalker The work has commenced from Republic Day. That will a big boost for our armed forces in the Demchok sector
 
Eye on China: Nyoma in Ladakh to handle fighter jets soon
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NEW DELHI: India is now all set to kick off the upgrade of the critical Nyoma advance landing ground (ALG) in eastern Ladakh to ensure it can also handle fighter operations, in the backdrop of China having consolidated all its air bases and military positions during the continuing 33-month military confrontation along the frontier.

The Rs 230 crore upgrade work at Nyoma ALG, which includes extending and strengthening the existing airstrip into a 2.7-km ‘rigid pavement’ runway for all kinds of fixed-wing aircraft for “defensive as well as offensive operations”, will begin in May-June, top defence officers told TOI on Tuesday.
With the Nyoma ALG located at an altitude of over 13,400-feet, and less than 50-km from the Line of Actual Control (LAC) with China, it will take “three working seasons” by the Border Roads Organisation to complete the entire upgrade project that also includes dispersal areas, hangars and other allied infrastructure in the forbidding terrain. “So, everything should be ready by mid-2025,” an official said.

Nyoma is already “a major staging area” for the IAF and Army, bridging the crucial gap between Leh airfield around 190-km away and the LAC. It has been extensively used for forward deployment of troops and heavy weapon systems like tanks since the multiple Chinese incursions into eastern Ladakh in April-May 2020.
Heavy-lift Chinook, medium-lift Mi-17 V5 and Apache attack helicopters as well as C-130J ‘Super Hercules’ aircraft, which can land at makeshift airstrips, regularly operate from the Nyoma ALG. The Army, too, has been practicing airdrops of paratroopers in the high-altitude region.

"But there has been a long-felt operational need to make Nyoma capable of handling fighters like Sukhoi-30MKIs and Rafales for both defensive and offensive options,” another officer said. “Operations from Leh and Thoise airfields sometimes get disrupted due to bad weather. The weather in Nyoma is much better throughout the year,” he said.


The IAF also has ALGs at Daulat Beg Oldie (DBO) and Fukche in eastern Ladakh. The one at DBO, in particular, overlooks the strategic Karakoram Pass and is just a few km from the LAC and the China-occupied Aksai Chin
region beyond. “But DBO is at an even higher altitude of 16,600-feet than Nyoma. There is also little scope to extend the runway at Fukche,” he said.

There has been a major spike in Chinese air activity all along the 3,488-km long LAC stretching from eastern Ladakh to Arunachal Pradesh in recent months, with the IAF even scrambling fighters in a precautionary air defence response.

China has upgraded all its major air-bases facing India like Hotan, Kashgar, Gargunsa, Shigatse and Lhasa-Gonggar with extended runways, hardened shelters and fuel storage facilities for additional fighters, bombers, drones and reconnaissance aircraft over the last two years, as earlier reported by TOI.
 
off course why would they do it in the open...
when you are there to lick their asses
 

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