HomeNewsBusinessCompaniesWhy state coal mining order is not a gamechanger

Why state coal mining order is not a gamechanger

Partha S Bhattacharyya, Former Chairman, Coal India believes that giving away a highly skilled activity like mining to incompetent agencies might not serve any real purpose.

December 17, 2015 / 18:11 IST
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The decision by the central government to allow public sector undertakings to mine and sell coal to small and medium enterprises (SMEs) is unlikely to have any major impact on Coal India's volumes though it may reduce the country's dependence on coal imports.That is the view of Partha S Bhattacharya, former chairman of Coal India, who is apprehensive about how successful the move will be, and says the government should rope in professional mining companies to mine, instead of handing over blocks to companies whose core competence isn't mining.“State governments don’t have the necessary kind of expertise nor do they have companies which have core competency in mining. In all probability they will be inviting bids and hire someone working as mine development operator or contractors,” Bhattacharyya says.

There is also limited possibility of this order impacting NTPC in any way, Bhattacharyya says. “NTPC had been given coal blocks 10 year back and they have 8-9 blocks with coal capacity of 1.5-2.0 billion tonnes. However, they have not mined any coal so far”, he says.  

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Bhattarcharyya’s views were echoed by Chintan Mehta, Metal Analyst at Sunidhi Securities.

Mehta pointed out that out of 34 operating mines auctioned in September 2014, only 9 have started operations yet and while these were expected to produce 40-50 million tonnes of coal, they have been able to produce just 9 million tonnes.