PM Modi to Inaugurate Ganga Expressway Tomorrow

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate the 594-kilometre Ganga Expressway at Hardoi in Uttar Pradesh on April 29, formally launching one of India’s longest access-controlled highways and unveiling a transformative vision for the corridor as an Integrated Manufacturing and Logistics Cluster rather than merely a road. The Uttar Pradesh government has positioned the expressway as an ‘expressway-cum-industrial backbone’ with 12 industrial nodes planned along its route — spanning districts from Meerut in the west to Prayagraj in the east — and investment proposals worth nearly ₹47,000 crore already secured from 987 investors.

The 12 industrial nodes are distributed across Meerut, Hapur, Bulandshahr, Amroha, Sambhal, Budaun, Shahjahanpur, Hardoi, Unnao, Raebareli, Pratapgarh, and Prayagraj — a geographic spread that covers the full Meerut-Prayagraj arc and creates manufacturing investment opportunities across districts that have historically lacked the logistics infrastructure to compete for large industrial investments. The IMLC model directly mirrors the PM GatiShakti multi-modal connectivity philosophy: transport infrastructure is not built in isolation but is pre-planned with industrial zones, logistics parks, and freight movement infrastructure embedded along the corridor from inception.

Freight Logistics Impact

For India’s freight logistics ecosystem, the Ganga Expressway opens a new east-west cargo movement corridor across the heart of Uttar Pradesh — a state of 230 million people that generates enormous freight flows in agricultural commodities, manufactured goods, and construction materials. The six-lane expressway provides a fast, access-controlled truck corridor linking the NCR’s manufacturing clusters with the Purvanchal industrial and consumption belt — reducing the travel time and operating costs for trucks that currently navigate congested state highways and national highways that were not designed for the freight volumes they now carry.

The expressway also provides road-based hinterland connectivity for the Dedicated Freight Corridor network’s UP nodes — including the New Kanpur GCT that DFCCIL has just reviewed for operational readiness — enabling cargo originating along the expressway corridor to access DFC rail logistics without first navigating to the limited number of DFC terminal access points via existing road infrastructure. The ₹47,000 crore investment pipeline for the IMLC’s 12 nodes, combined with the expressway’s freight connectivity and DFC integration potential, makes this one of India’s most consequential infrastructure inauguration events of 2026.

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