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Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Coal ministry to restore 5 captive coal block allotments to NTPC

Wednesday, 02 Nov 2011

BS reported that in a major development for Maharatna power generator NTPC Limited, the coal ministry is set to restore its five captive coal block allotments in a week.

The blocks were cancelled earlier this year on grounds of delays.

The move would boost the plans of the INR 57,000 crore company to more than double generation capacity to 75,000 MW by ramping up in house coal production to 47 million tonnes per annum, one fourth of its coal requirement over the next five years.

The decision has been prompted by a mix of factors including an urgent need to bridge the burgeoning gap in coal demand and supply, firm commitment of rapid development of the blocks from NTPC, the huge investments already made by the company on power projects linked to the blocks, pressure from the power ministry for restoring the blocks and the recent coal supply crisis.

Mr Sriprakash Jaiswal coal minister told Business Standard that "NTPC has assured us of quicker development of blocks now. Also, there have been many requests from the power minister. We are likely to give the blocks back as soon as the report of the review committee is submitted in four to five days." He also added NTPC, being a government company, deserves preference in this matter.

An intra ministerial review committee headed by coal secretary Mr Alok Perti has been reviewing the ministry's decision, taken in May 2011, to cancel 14 coal blocks and one lignite block awarded to six public sector undertakings, including NTPC.

Apart from rejuvenating the company’s fuel securing strategy, the decision would also set at rest months of uncertainty over the progress of the government’s captive coal production plan, as NTPC's blocks account for a major chunk of such reserves allotted so far.

The five cancelled blocks Chatti Bariatu, Chatti Bariatu (South), Kerandari, Brahmani and Chichiro Patsimal have combined geological reserves exceeding 3 billion tonne. The first three blocks are meant to supply fuel to two power plants of 1,320 MW capacity each Barh in Bihar and Tanda stage II in Uttar Pradesh. Both the projects, when commissioned, would require over 10 million tonnes of coal annually. The other two blocks are meant to feed the expansion of Kahalgaon power project in Bihar and Farakka in West Bengal.

Waiting For Approval
Coal blockDate of allocationTarget dateStatus of progress
Pakri BarwadihOct '04Apr '08Environmental nod granted, awaited, order for coal handling plant awarded
Chatti BariatuJan '06Jul '09Environmental nod granted, forest clearance awaited
KerandariJan '06Jul '09Environmental nod granted, forest clearance awaited
TalaipalliJan '06Mar '12Environmental nod and forest clearance awaited
DulangaJan '06Sep '11Environmental nod and forest clearance awaited
Brahman & Chichiro PatsimalJan '06Oct '11JV company with CIL incorporated in April 2010, exploration underway
Chatti Bariatu (South) Jul '07Jan '11MoU with Mineral Exploration Corp being finalized for exploration, application for land acquisition being submitted

Source - NTPC

An NTPC official informed that almost a half of the INR 6,600 crore investment in Barh has already been made. He added that "Also, Tanda stage II is in advanced stage of progress and the first unit is expected to be commissioned in early 2012-13."

NTPC was awarded a total of eight coal blocks over past seven years with reserves of around 5 billion tonnes. All these were expected to come into production between April 2008 and March 2012. However, not a single block has commenced production so far.

The review exercise could be extended to the cancelled blocks of Damodar Valley Corporation, another PSU under the power ministry, and Jharkhand State Electricity Board. The coal ministry had cancelled DVC’s Saharpur Jamarpani block in Jharkhand and Gondulpara coal block in the same state, jointly allocated to DVC and Tenughat Vidyut Nigam.

(sourced from Business-Standard)

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