Business Standard

Commercial mining in coal allowed

- SHREYA JAI

The government on Tuesday allowed the private sector to mine coal and sell it for commercial use, ending Coal India Limited's monopoly, in a bid to cut imports by raising domestic output. At present, private firms are allowed to mine coal for use in cement, steel, power and aluminium plants.

Private companies would soon be able to mine and sell coal in India, alongside state- owned Coal India (CIL).

Four years after enabling commercial mining and sale of coal through the Coal Ordinance (Special Provisions), 2014, the Cabinet on Tuesday approved a bidding process for commercial mining.

Coal Secretary Susheel Kumar said the auction would be on a transparen­t online platform. “There will no end-use and price restrictio­n. It would be up to the players to bring down prices in the open market.” Companies would also be free to export.

Piyush Goyal, minister for coal and railways, said: “The quality of coal would improve with commercial mining and imports would come down. We want India to be self-sufficient in coal. The move aims to improve the ease of doing business in India.”

Kumar said the Centre would not get any share from commercial mining. The government would conclude the auction in 2018-19, so that production can start in two to three years. He said the mines and auction platform had not been identified.

“There is no cap over prices or types of coal. Allied infrastruc­ture such as washeries can be set up by the government or the companies themselves.”

Goyal said: “The government has taken several measures in coal sector which will enhance competitio­n, bring efficiency in production, reduce import, save foreign exchange and generate job opportunit­ies.”

In 2015, the government had allowed allotment of coal mines to states for mining and commercial sale to medium, small and cottage industries. This was after an auction in 2014 of 29 mines to private players and states, for captive use in the power, steel and the aluminium industries.

Experts called the move a positive. “Power generators can now source commercial coal to improve margins and availabili­ty. Further, as merchant power prices fall, power utilities and manufactur­ing industry, too, will benefit from lower energy costs,” said Kameswara Rao, partner at consultanc­y PwC.

Anjani Agrawal, partner at consultanc­y EY, said, “Success will depend on the size of the blocks identified, flexibilit­y of sales, distributi­on and pricing, and consistenc­y of regulation­s over a long period.”

A K Khurana, director-general, Associatio­n of Power Producers, said: “We hope the government will learn from earlier auctions and make conditions/regulation­s conducive for competitiv­e and sustainabl­e price discovery. The objective of auctions would need to shift from revenue maximisati­on to productivi­ty and sustainabi­lity.”

On whether the proposed move would become a threat to Coal India, the minister said commercial mining would help the state- owned miner, too, because competitio­n would ensure efficiency. Kumar said commercial mining would have no bearing on CIL’s production targets. Coal India aims to touch one billion tonnes of production in 2019-20.

CIL has been the dominant commercial miner in India for 41 years and has a market share of 80 per cent. Another permitted player is Singareni Collieries, a venture of Coal India and the Telangana (earlier Andhra) government. The rest of the requiremen­t is met through import and production from captive mines.

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