According to sources, the select panel recommendations with reference to labour payment issue will be part of the Bill.
The amendment has run into trouble, with most parties, including allies of the ruling BJP, terming the decision to remove the clause that requires more-than-a-majority approval for land to be acquired for five sectors as 'anti-farmer'.
Earlier, an ordinance on coal was introduced on October 20 after the Supreme Court scrapped over 200 coal block allocations. It was valid till the January 4 as the life-span of an ordinance is only six weeks since the inception of a Parliament session.
Anil Padmanabhan, deputy managing editor of Mint says what is happening in the legislature is a decoupling of political strength. The deadlock in the Rajya Sabha is a big blow to the legislative ambitions of the NDA, particularly the BJP, he adds.
The Lok Sabha has passed the Coal Mines Bill.
The Coal Mines (Special Provisions) Bill, which replaces an ordinance, was brought in the wake of the Supreme Court order cancelling the allocation of 204 coal blocks on September 24 and resetting the agenda for their allocation.