Earthmoving equipment is a staple of the construction industry
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Satin Sachdeva, Secretary General, Construction
Equipment Rental Association (CERA) and member Global Rental Alliance (GRA)
What is the rental market scenario in earthmoving equipment?
The rental
market size in India has grown in last four years from less than 10 percent to
over 25 per cent now. Mordor Market Intelligence report has projected India
construction equipment rental market to register a CAGR of about 5.1 per cent
during 2020 – 2025. The construction equipment rental market can be segmented based
on product into earthmoving machinery, material handling machinery, and
concrete and road construction machinery. Earthmoving machinery such as
excavators, backhoe loaders enjoy enormous demand around the world as it has a
wide application in construction and mining.
The report
also shows that Indian construction rental market is currently dominated by material
handling equipment as compared to earthmoving equipment. However, earthmoving
sector in equipment rental market will continue to grow.
The rental penetration in India has grown to over 25 percent in last 5 years and is undergoing transformation towards becoming organized and adopting standardisation. Rental companies have now young and advanced fleet equipment with new technology, artificial intelligence and Telematics.
How is equipment financing doing for earthmoving equipment?
Financers
contribute to the growth of any construction equipment market, as the segment
is capital intensive. However, equipment rental industry needs more support
from them in the form of promoting the rental concept and in return they will
be able to sell the equipment more to rental companies and we can mutually
support each other. Financers should also consider relaxation periods or
holidays on EMIs and interest during crisis time in industry such as pandemic. NBFC’s
in particular should lower down their rates of interest and should offer
flexible EMI options.
What are the major challenges faced in the earthmoving equipment
segment?
As far as
equipment rental sector is concerned, the major challenge currently in
earthmoving equipment segment is stagnant rental tariff despite the fact that
we are working on thinnest possible margins and cost of maintenance, manpower, logistics
gave gone up by 25 per cent. Second is of delayed recovery of payments. Many times,
it is stuck to the extent that it never comes. This puts burden on rental
industry as we all have to GST even if the payment is not realised. We have asked
government for reforms in GST too. The government should support the industry
by levying GST on reverse charge basis, making the service receiver liable to
pay GST, or should make GST a liability on the service provider after the
company has received payments.
We also had
recently had a meeting with NHAI and urged them for reform in tendering process
to safeguard the interests of construction equipment rental industry also as it
employs lakhs of people. For delayed and stuck payments, CERA has also written
to MSME to make strict laws or regulations to secure payments of companies.
What are the key maintenance practises followed in earthmoving
equipment?
CERA advises
and keeps educating thee equipment rental industry for following key
maintenance practices for their earthmoving machinery.
1.
Clean your earth-moving machinery: It is a perfect way to keep earthmoving equipment safe and running. Dirt, grime, and debris
accumulate on and in parts of the equipment, which can damage parts and machine
can malfunction. Therefore, it is important to clean the machine and its parts
thoroughly and regularly as earthmoving equipment has to do difficult and dirty
work, which can alter the performance of the machine. However, cleaning should
be done in a way as prescribed by OEM.
2.
Train employees to operate earth-moving equipment: Unskilled operator can damage the equipment and can put own safety or
of other workers at risk. Therefore, to protect your employees and equipment, all
workers should be properly trained to operate earth-moving equipment.
3.
Lubricate your equipment
carefully: Heavy earth-moving equipment and
associated parts and tools will malfunction or become damaged if they are not
lubricated properly. Moving parts and components need lubrication because the
frequent movement causes friction. We also advise to use right oil and
lubricants as prescribed in manual.
4.
Preventive maintenance and regular
inspection: Regular
equipment inspections go hand-in-hand with preventive maintenance. Both save
unnecessary breakdowns and save costs for a rental company. Therefore, we also
advise rental companies to use telematics and equipment management software. Small
problems that aren't repaired may eventually become bigger problems and incur
costs and losses.
5.
Use the right spare parts and tools: First of
all don’t use spurious spare parts. Second, don’t use them if they don't fit or
aren't compatible. If you do this, you put your machinery at risk. Employees
are also at risk. Always read manufacturer's manuals, and find the right spare parts
and tools.
Please share more information on the investment made in the Indian
market in terms of manufacturing facility, etc.
OEMs now have good manufacturing
facilities in India and investing in the research and development and modern
technology. Even the foreign companies are manufacturing in India now. I
visited the Schwing Stetter facility this year near Chennai. It is an IoT-enabled,
energy efficient global manufacturing facility spread over 52-acre site at an
investment of Rs 300 crore.
How do you look at the future of earthmoving equipment?
Earthmoving equipment is a staple of
the construction industry, with a whole fleet of different machinery being used
on earthmoving projects. Earthmoving equipment and road construction equipment account
for close to 70 per cent of India's construction equipment market. Its market
will keep growing over the next few years too because of increasing government
spending on infrastructure development including roads, highways, tunnels,
bridges, metro rails, flyovers and commercial complexes.