Business Standard

Govt yet to work out iron ore pricing mechanism

Companies pitch for a benchmark price for the raw material

- MEGHA MANCHANDA

The Union government has dropped the proposal to cap iron ore prices but is yet to create a pricing mechanism for the raw material. Some mining companies are, however, pitching for a ‘ benchmark price’ for the raw material on the lines of oil and coal.

The pricing of iron ore has to be based on global parity and local demand and supply situation. The pricing of the end-product is market driven, said a mining company official who did not wish to be named.

The Ministry of Mines and the Ministry of Steel are at loggerhead­s over the issue, with the former asking for a benchmark price for the essential raw material and the latter opposing it fearing a spike in the price of the end product — steel.

The side favouring the benchmark price reasons that internatio­nally, the raw material in question and the price of minerals, in general, are benchmarke­d to a particular geography or country’s price.

Citing an example, an industry expert said that as in the case of bullion (gold) or equity, where the prices are derived by a certain index, the same should be replicated for minerals. Benchmarki­ng the price also means the states get their due share of taxes, he added. Currently, the Indian Bureau of Mines (IBM) collates the price of iron ore from all the states and decides the valuation of royalty every month.

Experts feel the global prices can also be added to the basket and a particular price can be arrived at. However, R K Sharma, secretary-general of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries (FIMI), said either auctions or buyer-seller agreements under the current framework were better. He feared that benchmarki­ng the prices might lead to a higher cost of the raw material and, subsequent­ly, less off-take from the mines at a time when the country was sitting on surplus mineral.

According to a report from the IBM, in 2016-17, the country had excess iron ore of 149 million tonnes as against total output of 191 million tonnes.

“Volatility drives the mining industry. If the prices are high, the miners mine more. The prices can be benchmarke­d with the internatio­nal market from the economic point of view, but the fact remains that the price of coking coal (70-80 per cent of the total cost of steel) has a bigger impact on the price of steel than iron ore,” former mines secretary S Vijay Kumar said.

In March, Steel Secretary Aruna Sharma had said the central government was working on a formula that might act like a cap on iron ore prices.

The steel ministry was of the opinion that the cap or benchmark would lead to lesser price fluctuatio­ns of iron ore. The need for capping or benchmarki­ng was felt after the price of the raw material from China witnessed a rise earlier this year. Experts believe China, the world's top producer and consumer of steel, is expected to boost infrastruc­ture spending, and iron ore could rally further.

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