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Insurance Surety Bonds for NHAI Cross ₹10,000 Cr Milestone

India’s infrastructure financing landscape witnessed a significant shift as Insurance Surety Bonds (ISBs) issued for National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) contracts surpassed the ₹10,000 crore mark. As of July 2025, 12 insurance companies have issued approximately 1,600 ISBs as Bid Security and 207 as Performance Security, amounting to a total value of ₹10,369 crore.

This development underscores the growing confidence and adoption of ISBs as a cost-effective, secure, and reliable alternative to traditional bank guarantees (BGs) in large-scale public procurement and infrastructure contracts.

What Are Insurance Surety Bonds?

An Insurance Surety Bond is a three-party agreement where the insurance company acts as a ‘surety’, providing a financial guarantee that a contractor will meet its contractual obligations. If the contractor defaults, the insurance company compensates the project owner.

This mechanism helps reduce financial strain on contractors and replaces the need for blocking large capital amounts as is required in bank guarantees.

Government Push and Policy Alignment

The Ministry of Finance has played a key role in making Insurance Surety Bonds and Electronic Bank Guarantees (e-BG) equivalent to traditional bank guarantees for all government procurement processes. This move is aimed at,

  • Reducing capital lock-in for contractors
  • Diversifying risk instruments in the procurement ecosystem
  • Increasing access to financial guarantees through the insurance sector

To further promote this shift, a workshop was organized by NHAI in New Delhi, chaired by Shri N.R.V.V.M.K Rajendra Kumar, Member (Finance), NHAI, with participation from IRDA, insurance companies, finance firms, and infrastructure experts.

Benefits of ISBs in Infrastructure Projects

As India gears up to become the third-largest construction market in the world, the annual demand for performance and bid guarantees is rising at 6–8% per year. In this context, ISBs offer several advantages,

  • Cost-effective: Premiums are often lower than bank fees for BGs
  • Capital efficiency: Contractors don’t need to block working capital or provide cash margins
  • Faster processing: ISBs are quicker to issue, especially in digital formats
  • Scalable: Insurance sector participation broadens access for mid-size and emerging contractors

This makes ISBs particularly valuable for large infrastructure players and public-private partnership (PPP) models.

Impact on NHAI and the Construction Ecosystem

NHAI has taken the lead in mainstreaming ISBs, ensuring they are accepted for both bid security (pre-contract) and performance security (post-award). This change,

  • Reduces barriers for new contractors
  • Encourages competition in highway projects
  • Enhances liquidity in the infrastructure ecosystem
  • Aligns with global best practices in construction financing

Key Facts to Remember

  • ISB Value Issued for NHAI (till July 2025): ₹10,369 crore
  • Issued by: 12 insurance companies
  • Usage
  • 1,600 for Bid Security
  • 207 for Performance Security
  • Regulatory Backing: Ministry of Finance equated ISBs with BGs
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