Afcons Infrastructure has emerged as the lowest bidder for the breakwater construction package at Vadhvan Port — the central marine civil works contract for one of India’s most ambitious greenfield port projects — with a submitted quote of ₹5,301 crore. The award of this contract, when formalised, will represent the single largest marine civil infrastructure contract in India’s port sector history and will mark the formal commencement of construction at a project that has been in planning, environmental assessment, and land acquisition for several years.
Afcons — a Shapoorji Pallonji Group company and India’s leading marine infrastructure contractor — has an extensive track record in port and coastal engineering, including breakwater construction, dredging, quay wall development, and offshore marine works across Indian and international projects. Its experience with complex marine civil structures in exposed coastal environments makes it a technically credible winner for the Vadhvan breakwater — which is both the most technically demanding and the most commercially critical single package in the port’s construction programme.
Why the Breakwater Is the Most Critical Package
A breakwater is the foundational element of any open-coast deepwater port: it creates the protected harbour basin within which vessels can berth, cargo can be handled, and port operations can be conducted safely regardless of open-sea wave conditions. At Vadhvan — located on Maharashtra’s northern coast in a zone with significant Arabian Sea swell exposure — the breakwater design must withstand severe wave conditions while providing adequate shelter across the port’s full planned basin area. The ₹5,301 crore value of the breakwater package reflects both the scale of the structure required (running several kilometres in length) and the engineering complexity of building a major rock-armoured structure in exposed deepwater conditions.
With the breakwater contract now at bidder selection stage, Vadhvan Port’s construction timeline is becoming clearer. The project has accumulated multiple positive milestones in recent weeks: 124 villagers voluntarily handed over land for the project in late April; the NHAI awarded a ₹2,360 crore expressway link contract; and the project had previously received PPPAC clearance. Afcons’ breakwater bid — the central construction package — is the piece that converts the project from a well-funded, well-planned ambition into an active construction site. Combined with a planned capacity of 23.2 million TEUs per year, Vadhvan Port is expected to be a transformative addition to India’s western coast container infrastructure, potentially rivalling or surpassing JNPA’s throughput when fully operational.
KMEW’s Saphale Shipyard: The Adjacent Infrastructure Play
Knowledge Marine and Engineering Works’ recent acquisition of 15 acres of waterfront land at Saphale — directly adjacent to the Vadhvan Port development zone — now looks even more commercially prescient with the Afcons breakwater contract award. A major multi-year marine construction project of this scale will require dredging, marine plant support, survey vessels, and maintenance engineering services from nearby facilities. KMEW’s Saphale yard, specifically positioned to serve Vadhvan’s construction and future operational needs, is set to benefit directly from the construction activity that the Afcons contract award will now generate over the coming three to five years.





