new delhi, Dec. 12 -- Indian Railways is exploring three new freight corridors to extend the high-speed cargo network deeper into southern, eastern, and central India, building on the success of two operational lines to create a continuous nationwide logistics loop, two people aware of the development said. Detailed project reports for the three new lines have been completed and are under examination, said one of the three people quoted earlier. Together, the new dedicated freight corridors (DFCs) are estimated to cost around Rs.1.5 lakh crore, the person said. The DFCs under consideration are: 1,115 km East Coast Corridor (Kharagpur-Vijayawada); 1,673 km East-West Corridor (Bhusawal-Dankuni); and 975 km North-South Sub-Corridor (Vijayawada-Nagpur-Itarsi. At least one corridor will be selected first based on technical feasibility, traffic potential, and funding availability. The proposal may be included in the upcoming Union Budget with token allocations for fiscal year 2027 (FY27), according to the three people quoted earlier-all spoke on th condition of anonymity as details are not public. The new corridors will complement the existing 1,337 km eastern and 1,506 km western DFCs. About 1,404 km of the western corridor is operational, while the remaining 102 km from Vaitrana to Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (JNPT) is scheduled to be commissioned soon. The existing corridors have boosted freight speeds and eased congestion on passenger routes. According to the ministry of railways, the national transporter's share in total freight movement dropped from over 60% in the 1990s to about 25% in 2020. But post-Covid, aided by the dedicated corridors, this has gone up to 27%, and the National Rail Plan targets to hit 45% by 2030. The railways push comes as India's logistics market expands. Mordor Intelligence, a global market research consulting firm, expects the country's freight and logistics market size to grow from around $350 billion in 2025 to about $550 billion by 2030. The East Coast Corridor, which contributes the highest freight loading for railways, is likely to be prioritized, said the first person quoted earlier, as it will support port evacuation in the eastern region and provide a dedicated route for mineral movement from Odisha and Chhattisgarh. The railways aims to complete the stretch-expected to cost Rs.40,000-50,000 crore-within five to seven years of commencement, the person said. Queries emailed to the ministries of railways and finance remained unanswered until press time. "Among all the corridors planned earlier, the East Coast corridor has the highest rate of return," said V. Shanker, former executive director-planning, Railways. "It complements coastal shipping rather than competing with it. Eastern ports desperately need better evacuation capacity. Once dedicated corridors are created, 30-35% of Railways' net tonne-km will move on them, allowing freight trains to run at 75-100 km/h-double the current average of about 25 km/h. This will make freight more reliable and allow time-tabled operations." The East Coast Railway zone has been the highest freight-loading zone for five consecutive years, driven by coal from Mahanadi Coalfields Ltd's Talcher fields, iron ore from Bailadila and Keonjhar, and cargo from ports such as Paradip, Dhamra, Vizag, Gangavaram and Gopalpur. A dedicated corridor is expected to lift the zone's throughput and help the railways pursue its target of 3,000 million tonnes (MT) of freight loading by 2030, up from an expected 1,702 MT in FY26. All the proposed corridors are designed to support double-stack container operations, higher axle loads and faster cargo movement between ports and hinterland, the people quoted earlier said. While the East-West and East Coast alignments would enhance connectivity with eastern ports, the North-South route would strengthen mineral and power-sector logistics across central and southern India. Experts are not convinced . "The Eastern and Western DFCs are almost complete and run 300-350 trains daily against a capacity of 480. Yet they haven't led to any major jump in loading or revenue," said Sudhanshu Mani, former general manager of Indian Railways and architect of the Vande Bharat Express. Freight loading is growing only 2-3% annually, with overall freight rising just 1.7% last fiscal, largely due to coal shipments. "Freight suffers from a lack of seamless inter-modal transfer, inadequate first and last-mile links, uncertain delivery times and sometimes uncompetitive tariffs," said Mani. "Rather than investing more in DFCs, railways should build more high-speed passenger corridors and upgrade existing lines to 120 km/h for passengers and 100 km/h for freight. This will reduce speed differentials and make freight movement more time-bound."...