The government has approved the Urban Challenge Fund (UCF) to boost urban development, providing Rs 1 lakh crore in central assistance from FY 2025-26 to FY 2030-31. The fund is expected to catalyse nearly Rs 4 lakh crore in total investment, emphasizing market-linked financing. Experts see it as a significant shift toward productive, sustainable, and inclusive urbanisation.
India's urbanisation is entering a decisive phase, with cities accounting for a dominant share of the country's GDP and hosting its most dynamic economic clusters. Yet they face persistent infrastructure deficits, climate vulnerabilities, fiscal constraints, and institutional fragmentation. The recently approved Urban Challenge Fund (UCF) marks a transition to a market-linked, reform-driven, and outcome-oriented framework for urban infrastructure.
Central assistance is capped at 25 per cent of project costs, with cities required to mobilise at least 50 per cent from market sources. The remainder can come from states, urban local bodies, or other channels. This indicates that urban infrastructure must increasingly access capital markets through bankable, revenue-backed projects.
The UCF is structured around three verticals. The first, cities as growth hubs, supports integrated spatial and transit planning, infrastructure along economic corridors, and development of economic anchors such as industrial, tourism, or logistics clusters. The aim is to enhance competitiveness and productivity, not just build assets.
The second, creative redevelopment of cities, tackles congestion and decline in historic cores and central business districts through brownfield regeneration, transit-oriented development, and reorganisation of public land to unlock value within existing urban footprints.
The third focuses on water and sanitation, emphasising service saturation, wastewater reuse, flood mitigation, and remediation of legacy waste sites, with climate resilience integrated throughout.
A key innovation is the Rs 5,000-crore Credit Repayment Guarantee Scheme, enabling smaller urban local bodies—those with populations below 1 lakh, plus cities in hilly and northeastern states—to access market finance via central guarantees.
Access to assistance depends on reforms, including improving creditworthiness, strengthening asset management systems, digitising service delivery, enhancing operational efficiency, and adopting integrated land use and mobility planning.
The fund redefines the private sector's role by mandating market financing and encouraging risk-sharing, opening doors for deeper involvement in design, financing, and operations. Project preparation support, transaction advisory, and digital monitoring aim to boost viability and investor confidence. If implemented well, it could deepen India's municipal bond market.
The Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs positions the UCF within a broader ecosystem, engaging states, urban bodies, financial institutions, and private developers through a competitive, challenge-based process that rewards readiness and innovation. By embedding market discipline, reform incentives, and measurable outcomes, it reframes urbanisation as an investment opportunity to drive India's next urban transformation phase. The writer is secretary, Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs.