Kishan Reddy: 31 NH Projects Worth ₹47,875 Cr Sanctioned in Telangana Since 2014
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Coal and Mines Minister G. Kishan Reddy on Saturday, 11 July 2026, highlighted the expansion of the national highway network in Telangana under the Narendra Modi government, stating that 31 national highway projects spanning 1,333 km with an investment of ₹47,875 crore have been sanctioned since 2014. The minister, who also serves as BJP Telangana state president, noted that the current NHAI-administered highway network in the state stands at 2,670 km, calling it a strong foundation for the state's economic progress.
Context
Posting in Telugu on X, Reddy drew a direct comparison between highway approvals before and after 2014. He stated that the 1,333 km sanctioned since 2014 is nearly double the 717 km that had been approved before that year. In his words: 'గత 12 ఏళ్లలో గౌరవప్రధాని శ్రీ నరేంద్ర మోదీ గారి నాయకత్వంలో తెలంగాణలో జాతీయ రహదారుల నెట్వర్క్ శరవేగంగా విస్తరించింది' ('In the past 12 years, the national highway network in Telangana has expanded rapidly under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi').
Telangana became a separate state only in June 2014 following the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh, which means all central highway allocations to the state have come within this same twelve-year window. The comparison with pre-2014 figures therefore reflects the combined effect of the new state's creation and the central government's increased infrastructure spending.
Policy Backdrop
The expansion Reddy cites aligns with the Bharatmala Pariyojana, the umbrella highway development programme approved by the Union Cabinet in 2015 to develop 34,800 km of highways in Phase I across the country. The programme covers expressways, economic corridors, inter-corridors, ring roads and coastal and port connectivity roads, with Telangana included in successive project phases aimed at improving inter-state freight movement.
The National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) serves as the primary implementation agency for these projects. Since 2014-15, the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways has progressively revised national highway construction targets upward, with annual sanctioning and completion figures forming a key metric for the government's infrastructure record.
Stakeholders and Impact
A broader national highway network directly benefits Telangana's logistics operators, manufacturing clusters around Hyderabad, and businesses dependent on freight connectivity to neighbouring states. The state, which hosts major pharmaceutical, IT, and industrial hubs, relies on road infrastructure to complement its rail and air connectivity.
NHAI contractors and construction firms operating in the state are among the immediate stakeholders, as sanctioned projects translate into tendering and execution activity. For commuters and freight operators, the stated 2,670 km NHAI network represents the current operational baseline, though physical completion status of all 31 sanctioned projects would determine the actual on-ground benefit.
What's Next
The progress of the 31 sanctioned projects will be tracked through NHAI's quarterly reports, which detail construction milestones, project completions, and toll operationalisation. Any additional allocations for Telangana in the next Union Budget will indicate whether the pace of sanctioning continues at the same level.
Reddy's post is part of a wider pattern of BJP leaders issuing state-specific infrastructure tallies ahead of political cycles, using central spending data to build a development narrative. Whether these figures translate into voter sentiment in Telangana — where the party is in opposition to the ruling Congress government — will be a key political variable to watch.