Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Coal India mine to halt output for a month

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Flooding at one of Coal India Ltd’s (CI) largest open-pit mines will halt production there for at least a month, a senior company official told

Reuters on Wednesday, in a setback for a country trying to reduce its dependence on coal imports.

The flooding at the Dipka mine, which produces more than 30 million tonnes a year of thermal coal and accounts for some 5% of Coal India’s overall output, could leave some power plants in eastern and central India scrambling for fuel.

The mine supplies coal to multiple utilities including NTPC Ltd’s Sipat plant in the eastern state of Chhattisga­rh, where the mine is located, and state-run utilities in western Maharashtr­a state.

Coal India declined to comment on the extent of the damage or the length of the likely production outage. An NTPC official said the company’s plant in Sipat, which had no stock of coal as of September 30, according to government data, was trying to arrange alternate sources of coal, but the official declined to provide further details.

The outage also comes at an inopportun­e time as state-run Coal India is due to begin roadshows on Thursday to woo investors ahead of a planned stake sale in the company.

“This is a huge loss for us, and is a big setback to our production goals,” said the Coal India official, who asked not to be named as he is not authorised to discuss the matter with media. The official said some expensive mining equipment may be damaged and had been submerged by the flooding that began on Monday, after embankment­s of a nearby river broke due to heavy rainfall.

Output from Coal India, the world’s largest miner by output, has been falling this year as heavy rains have hampered production at many mines in India’s east. Monsoon rains in India were 10% above average in 2019— the highest in 25 years—and seasonal rains have continued longer than expected.

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