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<p>The Kasara Ghat on the Mumbai-Agra National Highway (Abhijit Bhatlekar/Mint via Getty Images)</p>
The Narendra Modi government has built National Highways totalling 31,000 kilometres in over four years, the Times of India has reported.
According to the daily, this is 26 per cent more than the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government’s five years total of 24,425 km. By March 2019, the government will have constructed highways totalling 39,000 km, 60 per cent more than the total construction between 2009 and 2014.
“We had the highest ever record of building four-lane highways in 2017-18 at 2,200 km and this year, it will be more than 3,000 km. Four-laning of highways had slowed down during the first two years of this government as there was a sudden withdrawal of highway builders, who had bagged projects under public private partnership during the earlier government. The land acquisition law also created problems. We had to find solutions,” a government official said.
Around 16,650 km out of the total 24,455 km constructed during the UPA rule fell under the strengthening and two-laning categories. These categories made up around 23,570 km out of the total 31,000 km built in last four years.
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