Iron ore glut in Karnataka amid demand slump
Supply of iron ore has surged to excessive levels in Karnataka, which has been under severe restrictions since eight years. Exports, even to other states, are still prohibited, thereby leaving miners dependent on steel firms within the state.
Surplus availability currently stands at 5.19 million tonnes (mt). The higher supply vis-à-vis demand is on account of the production cap and ban on exports. In 2019, total exports from other states stood at 10.34 mmt of fines, and 1.116 mmt of lumps. This reflects the export potential for Karnataka.
In 2012, the Supreme Court —hearing a case of illegal mining and export from the state — imposed a ban on export and placed a cap on production. These were to protect the environment and the state’s revenue.
People in the know said: “Restrictions on iron ore trade in Karnataka is suppressing growth and has had deleterious effects on the industry as well as the exchequer. While other states export iron ore based on the EXIM policy of the government, an application by Vedanta and Mineral Enterprises — seeking approval to export ore not purchased by the steel and associated industries during the e-auction — is pending before the Supreme Court.”
The state exchequer has been hit to the tune of ~29,059 crore over the last 10 years due to unsold ore. In Karnataka, 70 per cent of the sourcing is by JSW. With only a few active purchasers of fines in the auctions, there is no competitive bidding and
large quantities of material are sold at the base price.
For instance, the 57 grade of iron ore fines from Odisha have realised an average ~1,550 per tonne (wet metric tonnes or wmt) ex-mines, during February/march. Karnataka prices of the same stood at ~1,490 per wmt (2per cent lower).
The domestic Nmdc-benchmark prices were drastically revised downwards during May/june by ~900 per tonne. In December 2017, the apex court had raised the production cap in Karnataka to 35 mt.