The Government's latest move to do away with the mandatory requirement of 10 hectares of minimum land area for setting up of IT/ITES SEZ will pave way for more SEZ launches by small and medium IT companies, feels Ramesh Nair, Managing Director - West, Jones Lang LaSalle India.
In a
landmark move that will have wide-ranging implications for commercial
real estate in India, the Government has done away with the mandatory
requirement of 10 hectares of minimum land area for
setting up a IT/ITES SEZ. With immediate effect, the minimum built-up
area requirements to be met by SEZ developers will be 100,000 square
meters for the seven major cities, 50,000 square meters for Category B
cities and only 25,000 square meters for the remaining
cities.
The first
and most encouraging impact of these amendments to the previous
requirements, which were a major hurdle, is that many more IT companies
will now be able to launch their own SEZs. Previously,
only the largest IT players could have their own IT SEZ’s given the
capital required to buy 25 acres land. Developers will now be able to
aggregate smaller contiguous land parcels and turn them into SEZs. In
cities such as Chennai and Bangalore (where the FSI
for IT Parks is as high as 3.25-3.75), an SEZ development can now be
developed on a land parcel as small as 7 acres.
Further,
some IT SEZ developers who have already met the 100,000 square meter
built-up area criteria will now convert the balance land for residential
use, giving the mixed-use edge while also making
the formation of many more walk-to-work residential projects possible.
Real estate developers will now be able to divide up their land holdings
and allocate smaller parts to IT companies to construct their own IT
SEZs.
Another
extremely important result of this ruling is that it will now become
easier to exit from SEZs given that transfer of ownership of SEZ units -
including sale - has now been allowed. Moreover,
Real Estate Private Equity Funds with foreign capital will now be able
to do more smaller deals, and this is bound to bring in more FDI into
the sector.
The
infusion of FDI into the real estate markets of smaller cities can also
become a critical factor in IT/ITES companies deciding to move into
these cities - with an obvious positive impact on
their local economies and therefore the growth of their real estate
markets across all segments.
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