BusinessLine (Hyderabad)

RINL’s woes worsen: Strike at Gangavaram Port leaves crucial coal supplies stranded

- Abhishek Law

Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Ltd, the state-owned steel major and one of the rare long steel makers in the country is grappling with severe operationa­l constraint­s. Raw material shortages have slashed its production capacity by 60 per cent, and only one of its three blast furnaces is currently operationa­l.

The ongoing strike at Adani-owned Gangavaram Port has further exacerbate­d the company’s struggles, leaving crucial coking coal and limestone worth ₹650 crore stranded. Coal and limestone are key steel-making feedstock.

Despite attempts to secure commodity loans and explore alternativ­e ports, current stocks are dwindling fast and are currently “at a few days”.

With the spectre of colossal debt looming , borrowing for additional raw materials is “not an immediate option”. The Ministry earlier ruled out a recapitali­sation of RINL, and the steel-maker is on the Centre’s disinvestm­ent radar.

“If the situation is not resolved, there will be an imminent shutdown that threatens extensive damage and exorbitant restoratio­n costs,” a Steel Ministry ošcial told businessli­ne.

RINL has approached the Andhra government for interventi­on and has also taken legal action to get its raw materials supply on track. The Steel Ministry has reportedly been apprised, too.

Operations are forcefully curtailed, dramatical­ly reducing coke oven pushings and hot metal production. The coke oven pushings per day were brought down to 140, down 56 per cent, from 320 pushings, and the hot metal production was brought down to 5,600 tonnes per day from around 14,000 tonnes..

Coal awaiting evacuation at Gangavaram includes 142,000 tonnes of hard coking coal, 90,000 tonnes of pulverised coal injection and around 82,000 tonnes of limestone.

Vessels carrying soft coking coal are diverted.

The typical blend of coking coal is around 50-70 per cent hard coking coal, 30-40 per cent soft coking coal and another 10 - 20 per cent indigenous coking coal. The average daily requiremen­t of coal was around 12,000 tonnes for normal production, which included around 8,000 tonnes of hard coking coal (HCC), 2,500 tonnes of soft coking coal (SCC), and 1,500 tonnes of indigenous coal .

“The absence of coking coal jeopardise­s equipment and safety, risking gas leakages and blasts,” the Ministry ošcial said.

In 2014, RINL entered into a 15-year contract with Adani Gangavaram Port Ltd , formerly GPL, to facilitate the handling of imported raw materials.

THE LOGISTICS WALL

The disruption at AGPL has halted coal transfer, leaving over 314,000 tonnes stranded, while vessels carrying soft coking coal are diverted, exacerbati­ng the scarcity.

Alternativ­e berthing arrangemen­ts at Vizag Port bring along logistics issues, including elongating coal transfer times.

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