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Stop captive mining & monopoly consumption rights

The policy of captive mining needs to end. The purpose of policy should be to open up energy markets, not close them down by giving consumers monopoly consumption rights in the form of captive mining leases.

February 20, 2015 / 14:25 IST
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R JagannathanFirstpost.com

The success of the ongoing coal block auctions should not blind the government to the reality that the sector is far from being reformed. The very fact that Naveen Jindal got Gare Palma-IV (2&3) for Rs 108 a tonne while Hindalco won Gare Palma-IV (5) in Chhattisgarh at Rs 3,502 a tonne tells us that something is wrong.

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This is what it may be; the policy of earmarking coal blocks for specific purposes, or the captive mining policy. There is absolutely no commercial sense in selling coal blocks based on who is going to use them. This is the surest way to kill the emergence of a domestic coal market and sensible, market-driven energy pricing that will optimise not just coal use, but all energy resources.

Just as beauty lies in the eye of the beholder, the same mine could have different values for different companies and users. A power company may want to pay less for coal than a metals company or a domestic user of chulhas. By earmarking mines for specific uses the government is essentially sanctioning wastage and inefficiency as each mine will have only a limited number of bidders at auctions, and those who get coal cheap will use it for the lowest value-added product or service.