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Updated: July 01, 2025 00:19
India’s infrastructure financing landscape is poised for a revival as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) rolls out revised project lending norms aimed at easing capital provisioning and boosting credit flow. According to Moody’s Ratings, the new framework—effective October 1, 2025—is expected to reduce uncertainty, revive lender confidence, and support medium-term loan growth in the infrastructure sector.
Here’s a comprehensive breakdown of the regulatory shift and its implications for banks, NBFCs, and the broader economy.
Key Highlights from Moody’s Assessment
- The RBI has slashed the provisioning requirement for under-construction infrastructure projects from a proposed 5 percent to just 1 percent
- This move is expected to encourage banks and non-bank lenders to re-enter the infrastructure lending space with greater confidence
- Moody’s noted that the finalization of these guidelines will reduce ambiguity in project financing and improve credit availability
- Infrastructure credit had contracted by 0.8 percent between April 2024 and April 2025, reflecting the chilling effect of the earlier draft norms
Revised Norms: What’s Changed
- The new rules apply only to projects achieving financial closure after October 1, 2025
- For infrastructure loans, provisioning during the construction phase is now capped at 1 percent, dropping to 0.4 percent once the project becomes operational
- Commercial real estate projects will require 1.25 percent provisioning during construction and 1 percent during operations
- The RBI has also allowed lenders to accommodate delays of up to three years in the Date of Commencement of Commercial Operations (DCCO) for infrastructure projects
Impact on Lenders and Borrowers
- State-owned banks and NBFCs, which have significant exposure to infrastructure, are expected to benefit from reduced capital strain
- Moody’s cautioned that loans disbursed before October 1 may see a one-time hit to profitability due to higher provisioning under the old norms
- The relaxed timelines and clearer definitions of credit events are expected to improve asset quality and reduce the risk of defaults
Sectoral Outlook and Policy Context
- The reforms come at a time when India is ramping up public infrastructure spending under the National Infrastructure Pipeline
- By aligning regulatory requirements with sector-specific risks, the RBI aims to make long-gestation projects more bankable
- Analysts believe the move will also help revive stalled projects and attract private capital into infrastructure development
As India gears up for its next phase of infrastructure-led growth, the RBI’s recalibrated lending norms mark a pivotal shift—one that balances prudential oversight with the need for credit expansion in a capital-intensive sector.
Sources: Moody’s Ratings, Economic Times Infra, Business Standard, Yahoo Finance, June 2025