Modi's "port-led" export drive leaves India's hinterland stranded

* Cost of getting container to port prohibitive - exporter

* Ports expand but road, rail links lag

* Modi backs state ports, but private rivals cheaper

* Global trade downturn puts Indian exporters under pressure

By Manoj Kumar

MUMBAI, Aug 6 (Reuters) - Mumbai's commercial seaport, which handles over half the container traffic through India's major ports, is doubling capacity as Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeks to build an export powerhouse.

The expansion, due to be completed in seven years, can't come quickly enough for Avinash Gupta, whose family business supplies steel forgings to Europe and the United States from the industrial hub of Ludhiana in northern India.

Yet the greatest challenge his $30 million business faces is getting his production to port. Gupta pays nearly $800 to a state-run rail cargo company to transport a 20-foot container to Mumbai - as much as 40 times the cost of shipping it onward to the Gulf commercial hub of Dubai.

It is exporters like Gupta that Modi had in mind when he launched his 'Make in India' drive last September, laying out a model of "port-led" development that would support industrial growth and help create manufacturing jobs.

Modi's vision includes creating a tax union to slash costs and transport times, and a network of industrial corridors connecting the interior to ports. But political opposition to both the new tax and a law making it easier to buy land for development mean those may be years away.

For now, the inefficiencies are exacerbating the pain of weak global demand and a 15 percent drop in exports between December and June from a year ago.

Exporting a standard container requires seven documents, takes 17 days and costs $1,332 in India, according to the World Bank's Doing Business 2015 report. India ranked 126th of 189 economies on the ease of trading across borders, well behind Mexico (44th) and China (98th). All of India's ports together handle less trade than Shanghai alone.

RISING COSTS

Gupta runs one of the thousands of small companies that contribute about half of India's $300 billion in annual goods exports. Despite falling global prices, his costs have gone up, and his overseas sales are down more than 60 percent.

While shipping lines have slashed freight rates in search of business, state-run Container Corp of India actually raised rail rates by up to 15 percent in April - even though its fuel costs have fallen.

"The hike in freight costs has made our life difficult. Since exports are already down 60-70 percent in the last three months, we will soon have to cut production," said Gupta.