It is also undergoing corporate debt restructuring, of Rs 14,814 crore (Rs 148.14 billion) of loans.
Slowdown in the power sector has been the primary cause of the breakdown in the payment cycle.
Gammon had a number of transmission line projects under the rural electrification scheme.
As state electricity boards fell into their own debt crisis, which they are yet to recover from, payments for these projects had dried, too.
Two years on, the company has payments pending from the governments of Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Uttar Pradesh.
Its total of stuck receivables are Rs 2,200 crore (Rs 22 billion). “A lot of the money is still stuck in rural electrification projects.
“In the next year or so, we should see things getting streamlined,” Girish Bhat, chief financial officer, told Business Standard.
SEBs, themselves victims of slow rises in power rates, have started slowly raising these, after getting permission to do so.
This would ease their cash situation, enabling them to pay vendors such as Gammon.
However, that is a slow process and would take between nine months to a year, the company believes.
And, while a large part of its order book remained either unpaid for or stuck in progress, new orders had also dried.
“The infra sector got into a lot of trouble due to liquidity crunch. Low growth in gross domestic product has an impact on infrastructure and vice versa,”
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