APMDC Suliyari Coal Upcoming MP MSME auction 1,05,000 MT @SBP INR 2730 on 1st May 2024 & PAN INDIA MSME on 2ND May 2024 2,00,000MT@ SBP 2730.

Login Register Contact Us
Welcome to Linkage e-Auctions Welcome to Coal Trading Portal

Coal news and updates

Govt prepares draft policy on surplus coal from captive mines

10 Dec 2013

The statement comes amid reports of sale of surplus coal by some private parties in open market against norms of captive coal block use

The government has prepared a draft policy on utilization of surplus coal from captive mines and is awaiting comments from various departments.
“Government has formulated a draft policy on usage of surplus coal, including middlings, rejects, etc which has been circulated to various ministries/departments for obtaining their comments,” minister of state for coal, Pratik Prakashbabu Patil, said in a written reply to Rajya Sabha.
The statement comes amid reports of sale of surplus coal by some private parties in open market against norms of captive coal block use.
As per the Coal Mines (Nationalisation) Act, 1973, there is no provision of sale of coal from the coal blocks allotted for captive use.
Patil said, “as per the conditions in the allocation letter issued to various allocatees of coal blocks, usable middling/rejects generated during beneficiation shall be used captively by the allocatee(s) in their end-use plants specified in allocation letter.”
The modalities of disposal of surplus coal would be as per prevailing policy and could also include handing over such coal to the local Coal India Ltd subsidiary or to any person designated by it at a transfer price to be determined by the government, the minister added.
In another reply to the Upper House in a related issue, he said in case of violation of norms of the use of surplus coal, “the government takes appropriate action against the allocattee company including de-allocation of the block”.
He said in case of Takli Jena Bellora (south part) coal block allocated to private firm Central Collieries Company for captive use, the sale of coal in open market was reported to the government and it had declared the “mining lease of the said block as void”.
Earlier, in the backdrop of the coal ministry’s proposed surplus coal policy, the power ministry has said that any excess fuel mined by the private firms from the captive blocks should be returned to state-run Coal India.
The coal ministry has floated a draft Cabinet note over the matter and is inviting comments from concerned ministries. According to Association of Power Producers (APP), a body representing as many as 20 electricity generation companies, the private companies have agreed to this proposal.
The ministry of power has also said the two proposed coal-based ultra mega power projects (UMPPs)—Bedabahal (Odisha)and Cheyyur (Tamil Nadu)—with an average capacity of 4,000MW, will be linked to the government’s surplus coal policy as and when it is finalized.
Recently, Tata Power, country’s largest private power producer, had sought government approval for using surplus coal from the Mandakini coal mine for its Maithon thermal power project (Jharkhand) that is facing coal shortage, and also the end-use plant of the Mandakini mine is yet to come up.

Source: PTI