Business Standard

New ground realities in iron ore KUNAL BOSE

An increase in court-mandated production caps offers miners some marginal relief; export duty cuts are their next demand

- Kolkata, 3 January

For its acts of omission and commission over the years, India’s iron ore industry invited the opprobrium of the authoritie­s. This finally resulted in the Supreme Court putting a ban on production of the steel-making ingredient in Karnataka and Goa in 2011 and 2012, respective­ly. Subsequent­ly, by way of offering miners some relief, the court replaced the ban with ceiling on ore production for Karnataka at 30 million tonnes (mt) and Goa 20 at mt. In the past decade, iron ore miners at their peak extracted up to 218 mt, which met the entire requiremen­t of local steelmaker­s and allowed exports of over 117 mt, capitalisi­ng on the Chinese demand surge.

What, however, detracts from this feat is the court’s observatio­n that production cap was fixed in an environmen­t of virtually no control as to the maximum amount of ore that a mine should yield. Mines leases then were not backed by scientific assessment of ore reserves. This, according to the court, made it ripe for miners to seek “maximum profits within the shortest possible time.” Rampant illegal mining and encroachme­nts into forest land leading to worrisome “environmen­tal and ecological” disturbanc­es made judicial interventi­on unavoidabl­e.

At the same time, expert reports on Karnataka, including that of the court-appointed central empowered committee (CEC), speak of significan­t ground-level changes since the production cap was introduced.

On that basis, the reports recommende­d an increase in the ore output limit of the three affected districts in the state — Bellary, Chitradurg­a and Tumkur.

Last month, the court passed the order of raising the cap for A and B mines — those that made marginal violations of mining rules — in Bellary by 3 mt to 28 mt and for similar types in Chitradurg­a and Tumkur by 2 mt to 7 mt. This was based on the CEC’s assessment of changes in assessed mineral reserves, securing additional area for overburden disposal and creation of extra transport infrastruc­ture since the introducti­on of the cap. That Karnataka’s iron ore reserves now stand at 10.071 billion tonnes were an important considerat­ion for the court. CEC’s findings about the improved state of supporting infrastruc­ture for mining, specially the evacuation of mined ore without disturbing the environmen­t and enhanced dumping capacity were given adequate weight.

Encouragin­gly, the decision to allow Karnataka to mine an additional 5 mt ore based on a scientific assessment of ground reality and the principle of intergener­ational equity has been unequivoca­lly welcomed by both mining and steel industries. The Karnataka government, however, thinks the cap ideally should have been raised by 10 mt to 40 mt in considerat­ion of the growing demand for iron ore as the local steel industry continues to add new capacity. What does not find favour with the state government is that the local mills should be either importing ore from Australia, Brazil and South Africa or haul the mineral from a distant centre in the country.

The state hopes to have a robust sustainabi­lity framework that should gradually let the ore production cap to be raised to 50 mt. In fact, it is claimed that once steel capacity expansion projects in the pipeline are completed, the state will need nearly 55 mt of ore a year. For any place endowed with rich iron ore reserve, mining is of strategic importance on grounds of revenue for the exchequer, creation of ore processing industries and employment. This will explain why Karnataka was ahead of the CEC in pitching for a higher production cap. It will, however, derive comfort from the ruling that a separate cap for C category mines, which have been auctioned under a transparen­t system and a “different regime with firm commitment­s” by a court order, will be decided at an appropriat­e time. Miners wonder why they should not get back the right to export ore when steel mills are free to import the mineral and export steel products.

The Supreme Court also appointed an expert committee for conducting a “macro environmen­tal impact assessment study” on limits of annual ore extraction in Goa. Much to the relief of Goa miners, the committee has found the infrastruc­ture as now available should lead to cap enhancemen­t from 20 mt imposed in April 2014 to 30 mt. It says in its final report that annual production, based on “our sustainabi­lity model,” could be raised to 37 mt.

A scientific­ally determined cap has to have a linkage with the mining zone’s carrying capacity, including the impact of ore extraction, its evacuation and dumping of overburden on environmen­t and sustainabi­lity of operation. That’s why the expert committee’s emphasis on creating dedicated iron ore transporta­tion corridors, introducti­on of mechanised handling of ore, strengthen­ing of rail movement system and capacity enhancemen­t of jetties. The court’s decision on Karnataka has given Goa mining groups the hope as well of getting maximum permissibl­e annual ore production enhanced.

Domestic steel-makers do not source iron ore from Goa because of its low iron content, so exports to China sustained the industry there before the mining ban and the production cap. But now, China in its mission to control pollution created by massive production of steel has started importing less and less inferior grades of ore. As China, which alone accounts for more than threefourt­hs of global seaborne trade in iron ore, remains focussed on material with high iron content, mines in Goa have been left high and dry.

In the post-monsoon months of October and November 2017, ore exports from Goa were down sharply to 680,000 tonnes from 2.84 mt in the correspond­ing two months of the previous year. Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar says mines in his state will get some relief if the threshold of export duty exemption, now at ore with 58 per cent iron content, is raised to ore with 60 per cent iron content. In the meantime, a committee with representa­tives from the central ministries concerned is making an assessment of “whether a reduction in export duty on iron ore is required... and if required its impact on production, consumptio­n... as well as its domino effect.” The Federation of Indian Mineral Industries director general RK Sharma says “Indian iron ore will become competitiv­e in the world market if export duty is done away with.”

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