India is in talks with the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to secure about $2.5 billion in additional financing, according to multiple reports. The funding is intended to support urban infrastructure development and job creation, with some accounts citing loans of roughly $1.5 billion from the World Bank and $1 billion from the ADB. Several outlets link the request to tighter fiscal space, saying higher costs from the Middle East conflict have increased India’s subsidy bill and added pressure from rising oil prices. With India importing most of its crude, higher energy costs are reported to have constrained spending room for new infrastructure programmes.

Business Line and other coverage also refer to a broader World Bank Group financing framework in which India receives annual support of about $8 billion to $10 billion over five years, suggesting the proposed $2.5 billion would fall within that arrangement. Free Press Journal reports that disbursements are expected to be announced within the next two months, while it also notes that the ADB and India’s finance ministry had not issued an official response at the time of reporting. Overall, sources describe ongoing discussions without a confirmed final decision.