Dedicated Freight Corridor boosts Gujarat logistics ahead of VGRC 2025
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC) at Varnama in Vadodara has nearly tripled freight train speeds and sharply cut transit times for key commodities, officials said ahead of the Vibrant Gujarat Regional Conference (VGRC) scheduled for 29–30 June in Vadodara. The infrastructure push is being positioned as a centrepiece of Gujarat's case for industrial investment at the upcoming conference, which will focus on infrastructure and investment opportunities across Central Gujarat.
Speed and Capacity Gains
Freight trains on conventional shared tracks in the region previously averaged just 25–26 kmph, constrained by the simultaneous movement of passenger and goods trains. On the dedicated corridor, average speeds have climbed to around 70 kmph, according to officials associated with the Varnama DFC. The Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation of India Limited (DFCCIL) has set a target of pushing speeds further to 100 kmph.
Currently, between 50 and 70 goods trains operate daily on the Vadodara–Mumbai route. Railway authorities plan to divert all freight traffic to the dedicated corridor within the next two to three months, after which daily freight train numbers on the dedicated tracks are expected to rise to between 110 and 140 — effectively doubling freight-handling capacity while freeing conventional tracks for additional passenger services.
Transit Time Cuts: The Dudhsagar Example
Officials cited the movement of milk from Mehsana's Dudhsagar Dairy to Delhi to illustrate the corridor's real-world impact. The combination of the dedicated freight network and Truck-on-Train services has reduced transit time from approximately 17 hours to seven hours — a reduction of nearly 60 per cent. The faster movement has also lowered fuel consumption and overall logistics costs for operators.
Cost Advantage Over Road and Air
The economics of the corridor are stark. Officials noted that air freight typically costs more than ₹40 per tonne-km, while road transport ranges between ₹25 and ₹30 per tonne-km. Dedicated rail freight, by contrast, costs less than ₹10 per tonne-km, making it the most cost-efficient mode for bulk movement. Authorities estimate that once fully operational, the corridor could reduce heavy truck traffic on national highways by around 40 per cent, given that a single freight train can carry the equivalent load of approximately 400 trucks.
Network Pressure and the Golden Quadrilateral Problem
The urgency behind dedicated freight infrastructure stems from a structural imbalance in India's rail network. The country's Golden Quadrilateral rail corridor accounts for only 16 per cent of total track length yet carries nearly 58 per cent of all freight traffic. The Vadodara–Mumbai stretch had been operating at around 150 per cent of its designed capacity, making congestion relief a strategic necessity rather than an incremental improvement.
The DFC passing through 30 villages in Vadodara district forms part of the broader Western Dedicated Freight Corridor connecting northern and western India. Connectivity with major ports — Mumbai, Mundra, Pipavav, and Kandla — has also been strengthened, improving export logistics for Gujarat-based businesses.
What Comes Next
Preparations are underway to run freight trains between Vadodara and Mumbai's Jawaharlal Nehru Port on fixed timetables, mirroring passenger train scheduling. Traffic management is being handled through an advanced Train Management System, and plans are in place to establish a Gati Shakti Cargo Terminal in Vadodara to support rising commercial traffic. The shift of cargo from road to rail is also expected to reduce carbon emissions. The DFC is set to feature prominently in VGRC discussions as Gujarat seeks to leverage large-scale infrastructure to attract industrial investment.