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The Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH) circular dated January 12, 2026 has fundamentally altered the dispute resolution landscape for India’s road-infrastructure sector by restricting arbitration as the default forum for disputes exceeding INR 10 crore (ten crore) in BOT, HAM and EPC contracts. For project sponsors, EPC contractors, concessionaires, lenders and in‑house counsel, the MoRTH circular arbitration India 2026 changes demand immediate contract-level responses, from redrafting dispute clauses and preserving pending claims to recalibrating enforcement strategies for performance guarantees and bank guarantees. This practitioner guide provides the actionable playbook the market needs: what the circular says, whether it is legally enforceable, how to protect ongoing arbitrations, and step-by-step checklists for every stakeholder category.
The operative paragraphs of the January 12, 2026 circular introduce a revised dispute resolution framework that replaces the arbitration clauses traditionally embedded in MoRTH and NHAI standard-form contracts. The circular’s core directives can be summarised as follows:
The circular directs that standard dispute resolution clauses in MoRTH/NHAI contracts shall be substituted with the revised framework annexed to the circular. The annexed framework replaces the arbitration clause for high-value disputes with a committee-based settlement process and, where settlement fails, directs parties to approach civil courts of competent jurisdiction rather than arbitral tribunals.
The MoRTH follow-up circular dated 25 February 2026 provides further administrative detail. It circulates a model settlement agreement template to field offices, specifies the composition and authority of departmental dispute resolution committees, and clarifies the procedure for transitioning pending negotiations into the new framework. Industry observers note that NHAI regional offices began circulating operational notes to concessionaires in March 2026, requesting acknowledgment of the revised provisions. These developments signal an administrative intent to implement the changes rapidly, even before formal contract amendments are executed.
The central legal question raised by the MoRTH circular arbitration India 2026 framework is whether an administrative direction can override or extinguish a contractual arbitration clause already agreed between parties. This question sits at the intersection of executive power, party autonomy in arbitration and public procurement law.
An administrative circular is, in law, an internal executive direction. It binds government officers and departments in their administrative conduct, but it does not, by itself, amend the terms of an executed contract. Where a contract contains an arbitration clause that satisfies the requirements of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, that clause constitutes a binding agreement between the parties. The principle of party autonomy, foundational to Indian arbitration law, holds that an arbitration agreement can only be modified or revoked by mutual consent of the contracting parties, not by a unilateral administrative instruction.
Industry observers expect that contractors and concessionaires will argue the circular cannot retroactively strip existing contracts of valid arbitration clauses without their consent, and that any attempt to do so amounts to a unilateral contract variation unenforceable at law. Conversely, the government may assert that the administrative direction reflects sovereign procurement policy, that standard-form contracts are awarded on the basis of government conditions, and that acceptance of modified terms is a condition of ongoing project participation.
The practical position for all parties is to assume the administrative direction will be enforced by government counterparties in the near term while simultaneously preserving the right to challenge its applicability. Until a court stays or strikes down the circular’s application to existing contracts, contractors and lenders should operate on a dual-track basis: complying with administrative requests where necessary to maintain project relationships, while formally reserving all arbitration rights through written notices.
Parties with arbitrations already commenced, or claims ripe for arbitration, face the most urgent practical question: does the circular terminate or suspend existing arbitral proceedings? The short answer is that the legal position remains unsettled, but the administrative intent is clearly to discourage and ultimately replace ongoing arbitral references with the new settlement framework.
Early indications suggest that MoRTH and NHAI have begun issuing communications to counterparties in active arbitrations, requesting parties to agree to transition their disputes to the revised settlement committees. Whether such requests amount to enforceable directions or merely invitations to negotiate will depend on the specific contract terms and the procedural posture of each arbitration.
| Step | Action | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Assess whether your contract falls within the circular’s scope (BOT/HAM/EPC with MoRTH/NHAI) | Immediate |
| 2 | Serve a written notice to the government counterparty expressly reserving all rights under the existing arbitration clause | Within 7 days |
| 3 | If arbitration has commenced, file a status application with the tribunal confirming continuation | Within 14 days |
| 4 | Consider bifurcation: separate claims below INR 10 crore (potentially retaining arbitration) from claims above the threshold | Within 30 days |
| 5 | If the government counterparty seeks to terminate or adjourn the arbitration, apply to the supervisory court under the Arbitration Act for continuation orders | As needed |
| 6 | Preserve all documentary evidence, valuations, running-account bills, variation orders, correspondence, that supports the claim quantum | Ongoing |
Practitioners observing the market reaction note that several large concessionaires have already commenced formal reservation-of-rights exercises, and the likely practical effect will be a wave of applications to High Courts for declarations on the circular’s applicability to subsisting arbitration agreements. Parties should plan for both scenarios: continuation of arbitration and transition to the settlement committee process.
Whether negotiating new contracts or seeking to amend existing ones, parties need practical drafting solutions that accommodate the MoRTH circular 2026 while preserving maximum dispute resolution flexibility. The challenge is acute in arbitration in infrastructure contracts India, where standard-form government agreements leave limited room for bespoke negotiation, but supplementary agreements, side letters and lender security documents offer real opportunities for risk allocation.
Suggested for: new EPC and HAM contracts where government counterparty agrees to tiered framework.
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Contract where the amount in dispute is less than INR 10,00,00,000 (Indian Rupees Ten Crore) shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration in accordance with the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, administered by [institutional rules]. For disputes where the amount in dispute equals or exceeds INR 10,00,00,000, the Parties shall first attempt resolution through the Departmental Dispute Resolution Committee within 90 days; failing resolution, either Party may refer the dispute to mediation under the Mediation Act, 2023, for a period not exceeding 60 days. If mediation fails, the dispute shall be referred to the courts of competent jurisdiction.”
Suggested for: complex BOT concession agreements with valuation-intensive disputes.
“Disputes concerning the valuation of assets, termination payments, or the calculation of annuity adjustments shall be referred to an independent expert appointed in accordance with [Schedule X], whose determination on matters of valuation shall be final and binding. All other disputes where the amount does not exceed INR 10,00,00,000 shall be resolved by arbitration under [institutional rules] on a fast-track basis. Nothing in this Clause shall restrict the right of either Party to seek urgent injunctive or interim relief from a court of competent jurisdiction.”
Suggested for: lender security documents, inter-creditor agreements and BG facility letters.
“Notwithstanding any dispute resolution mechanism applicable to the underlying Project Agreement, the Lender’s rights under this Security Agreement, including the right to invoke any Bank Guarantee, Performance Guarantee, or Demand Guarantee, shall remain exercisable independently and shall not be contingent upon, or stayed by, any dispute resolution process (whether arbitration, mediation, settlement committee proceedings, or litigation) between the Borrower and any Project Authority.”
For a deeper examination of arbitration vs litigation and their practical differences, parties should weigh cost, enforceability, and timeline considerations when selecting their preferred mechanism under the new regime.
The restriction on arbitration does not, as a matter of law, affect a party’s right to enforce performance guarantees and bank guarantees. BG invocation is a contractual and banking-law remedy that operates independently of the dispute resolution mechanism in the underlying project agreement. However, the practical effect of the MoRTH circular on performance guarantee enforcement India is significant: uncertainty about the available dispute forum can embolden counterparties to resist BG invocation on technical or procedural grounds, and it may slow bank compliance if the bank perceives litigation risk.
| Stage | Typical Timeline | Key Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Demand notice served on bank | Day 0 | Defective notice (non-compliance with BG wording), bank refuses payment |
| Bank internal processing | 3–7 business days | Bank seeks legal opinion; may delay if contractor files injunction application |
| Contractor applies for injunction | Day 1–10 | Court may grant interim stay; parties drawn into emergency litigation |
| Court hearing on injunction | Day 10–30 | Contractor must show fraud or irretrievable injustice to restrain invocation; threshold is high but not impossible |
| BG proceeds released (if no injunction) | Day 7–14 | Proceeds received but contractor may initiate recovery proceedings |
Contractors facing BG invocation should, conversely, preserve counter-security, challenge any defective invocation notice immediately and, where grounds exist, apply for urgent injunctive relief. A thorough understanding of construction law terminology is essential for drafting precise invocation and challenge documents.
The intersection of the MoRTH circular with the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC) creates a compounding layer of risk for creditors. Where a contractor or concessionaire enters the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP), the moratorium under Section 14 of the IBC automatically stays the institution or continuation of any proceedings against the corporate debtor, including arbitrations and suits. If arbitration is already unavailable due to the circular, and court proceedings are also stayed by the CIRP moratorium, creditors may find themselves with no active forum for dispute resolution during the insolvency period.
For a broader perspective on how Indian insolvency law intersects with cross-border enforcement, readers may consult the analysis of the cross-border insolvency regime under IBC amendments.
For guidance on preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings, parties retaining arbitration for sub-threshold claims should ensure procedural readiness from the outset.
| Date | Document / Event | Practical Effect for Parties |
|---|---|---|
| 12 January 2026 | MoRTH Circular No. H-25011/02/2025-P&P | Introduces INR 10 crore threshold; directs substitution of arbitration clauses in BOT/HAM/EPC contracts with administrative settlement framework; immediate compliance directives issued to MoRTH and NHAI offices. |
| 25 February 2026 | MoRTH follow-up circular and model settlement agreement | Provides model settlement templates, specifies composition of departmental dispute resolution committees, and clarifies escalation procedures for field offices. |
| March 2026 | NHAI regional operational notes and sector guidance | Sector-specific implementation notes circulated to concessionaires; requests for acknowledgment of revised provisions; model clauses and settlement templates distributed to field offices. |
This timeline will be updated as further judicial developments and administrative clarifications emerge. Parties should also be aware that the Ministry of Finance had previously, in a June 2024 Office Memorandum, recommended restricting arbitration in domestic public procurement contracts below certain thresholds, a policy direction that the MoRTH circular now operationalises for the road sector specifically. Practitioners can explore how different legal systems handle government contracts arbitration India and internationally through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
The MoRTH circular arbitration India 2026 framework represents the most significant shift in infrastructure dispute resolution in over a decade. While its legal enforceability, particularly regarding existing contracts, remains an open question, the administrative machinery is already in motion. Contractors, lenders and in‑house counsel cannot afford to wait for judicial clarity. The immediate priorities are clear: serve reservation-of-rights notices, audit dispute clauses, secure BG invocation readiness, and prepare for parallel engagement with both settlement committees and courts. Proactive parties who act now will preserve optionality; those who delay risk losing rights that may prove irrecoverable.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ameya Gokhale at Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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