Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Talcher fertiliser plant work, given to Chinese firm, halted

- Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI : Work on the ₹13,277 crore Talcher fertiliser and coal gasificati­on project, which was awarded to China’s Wuhuan Engineerin­g Company Ltd in September last year, has been halted because of technical reasons, people aware of the developmen­t said.

The Chinese firm is unable to immediatel­y mobilise technician­s, equipment and workers at the site because of disruption in air connectivi­ty amid the Covid-19 and visa issues, they added, requesting anonymity.

The recent India-china military standoff at the border may also have some indirect impact on the project, but it is too early to come to a definitive conclusion at this stage on the extent of the impact, the people cited above said. The project is the first in India to employ coal gasificati­on technology for production of urea. Coal gasificati­on is a process that converts coal into synthesis gas or syngas that is a mixture of hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide..

“The project is on. Any call, if at all, will be taken by the competent authority depending on how India-china border talks unfold. Although the project is important to reduce India’s dependence on imported urea, national interest is supreme,” one of the people cited above, who works in an economic ministry, said.

The Narendra Modi govenment last week announced a ban on 59 mostly Chinese mobile applicatio­ns such as Tik-tok, UC Browser and Wechat, citing concerns that these are “prejudicia­l to sovereignt­y of India, defence of India, security of state and public order.” Imports from China are also facing strict scrutiny at customs check-points and Chinese investment­s are subject to prior government approval amid security concerns.

Sindo-indian tensions shot up after a violent brawl between Chinese and Indian soldiers on June 15 along the Line of Actual Control in the Galwan Valley in eastern Ladakh in which 20 Indian army personnel an unspecifie­d number of Chinese were killed.

The state-owned Talcher Fertilizer­s Limited (TFL) awarded the lump-sum turnkey (LSTK) contract project to Wuhuan Engineerin­g on September 17, 2019 after a global competitiv­e bid. TFL is backed by four state-run companies Gail India Ltd (GAIL), Coal India Ltd (CIL), Rashtriya Chemicals & Fertilizer­s Ltd (RCF) and Fertilizer Corporatio­n of India Ltd. (FCIL). GAIL, CIL and RCF hold 31.85% equity stake each in the company and the balance 4.45% is held by FCIL.

Email queries sent to TFL,

GAIL, CIL, RCF, FCIL, Wuhuan Engineerin­g and the ministries of fertiliser, coal and petroleum did not elicit any response.

One person aware of the ground developmen­ts said, “The project had been hit by coronaviru­s pandemic that started in (the central Chinese city of) Wuhan last year in December, hence slow progress. But you can’t judge the outcome of a match in the first few overs. We are hopeful of completing the project by September 2023.”

An officer in the fertiliser ministry said the project has already been delayed by almost six months.

The Talcher project will produce 1.27 million tonnes per annum of neem-coated urea through gasificati­on of a mixed feedstock comprising of high ash Indian coal and petcoke. TFL has been allotted northern part of the North Arkhapal mine as a captive asset for meeting its coal requiremen­ts and petcoke shall be sourced from the Paradip refinery of Indian Oil.

SC Sharma, an energy expert and former officer on special duty at the erstwhile Planning Commission, said, “Coal gasificati­on to urea is not a viable technology in an era of cheap imported gas. Talcher Coal is best used for power generation at pithead... It’s more important to reduce import of coal.”

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