The two-day labour
strike in Coal India Ltd (CIL), called jointly by all the trade unions,
including the HMS affiliated to the BJP, has thoroughly exposed the
fragility of the demand-supply balance in the thermal power sector. The
spectre of power shortages and blackouts loomed large and was averted at
the last minute after ministerial intervention, which came at a cost. |
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The deal with the
unions has been to reassure them against any proposed denationalisation
of CIL and perhaps to also indefinitely shelve the sale of even a
fraction of the CIL equity. These proceeds are critical to meet the
fiscal deficit target, which in this case will not be met. "King coal"
looms large over the economy. Therefore, it is necessary to evolve a
holistic and forward looking policy for it. |
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Energy |
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Coal is and will
remain the principal energy source for the foreseeable future. Coal
output increased from 352 million tons (mt) in 2001 to about 613mt in
2013-14. During this period, however, domestic demand increased from
411mt to 744mt necessitating imports of nearly 100mt. CIL, the public
sector monolith, saw its output stagnate from 431 to 462mt between 2011
to 2013 while imports were rising. In comparison, China’s coal output
increased from 1,001mt in 2001 to nearly 4,000mt in 2013. In keeping
with overall economic performance, the gap in Chinese and Indian coal
production has widened. |
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90 per cent of CIL’s
output comes from open cast mines, which if not strictly regulated, are
an environmental scourge and disrupt communities and livelihoods of
tribal people, that are the majority in the coal producing regions. In
contrast China’s coal output, more than six times the Indian production,
is made up of 80 per cent coal from underground mines, which result in
relatively far lower ecological and demographic impact. Despite recourse
to open cast mining, CIL has been unable to keep up with domestic
demand. This is reflected in over 20,000MW of electricity generation
capacity remaining under utilised and coal imports expected to increase
to almost 200mt annually over the next ten years. India possesses coal
reserves to last it more than a hundred years. |
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Output |
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Therefore, India needs
to ramp up its coal output as much as possible in the short to medium
term. To achieve this substantial output expansion, however, requires
jettisoning the present policy regime and replacing it with a new policy
framework. Incrementalism and tinkering at the margins or reacting to
court decisions will not serve our national interest. The objectives of
the new policy would be:
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(i) Maximising non-coking coal output in the shortest time, thereby eliminating shortages and imports; |
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(ii) Adopting latest mining technologies including longwall mining, fluidised bed combustion, in-situ gasification; |
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(iii) Introducing latest coal combustion and carbon
sequestration technologies to maximise pithead power generation. This
avoids transporting poor quality coal over long distances, which worsens
the energy balance and also prevents coal output expansion becoming
dependent on last mile railway connectivity; |
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(iv) Raising productivity levels to make coal mining globally competitive; and
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(v) Attracting investment for geological exploration.
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These objectives would be best achieved by attracting
large-scale private investment by specialised mining companies that can
undertake geological exploration, mining operations and transportation
using latest technologies and at globally competitive costs. At the same
time, it is important to ensure that profit maximising private sector
mining companies are effectively restrained from practices that will
damage the environment and trample over the rights of indigenous people.
A robust regulatory mechanism, effectively implemented, can ensure that
these two ostensibly conflicting objectives of attracting large-scale
private investment and minimising environmental degradation and human
costs can both be achieved.
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Admittedly, there was urgency in addressing the
vexed situation in which the industry was landed after the August 2014
Supreme Court rulings. However, seven months is surely sufficient time
for designing a robust and comprehensive policy response. |
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However, to do so,
required a change in the policy mindset from merely reacting to Supreme
Court judgements to taking the longer term and more holistic view of
national goals and ground realities. I am afraid that with the twice
promulgated Coal Mines Special Provision (Second) Ordinance (first was
passed in October and the second on 29th December) an opportunity to
come up with an innovative policy framework been lost. |
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Ordinance |
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The ordinance does
nothing to attract private investment and technology by specialised
mining companies that produce coal for commercial sales as opposed to
producing it for self-consumption. It only legalises coal mining by
private sector actual users, which was hitherto done under an executive
order that the Court found illegal. It does not address the five goals
enunciated above. In fact it further reinforces CIL’s dominant position
by requiring that "actual users" who mine coal, surrender their excess
production to CIL – not to other users! Thus the impact of another
strike in future will be even greater. The ordinance does not even
mention the need for environment and human rights protection and
enhancing productivity with the use of frontline technology. There is no
mention of putting in place a regulatory framework. |
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I am afraid the coal
ordinance may not address the prevailing domestic coal scarcity, rising
imports, use of backward and inappropriate technologies, poorly paid
mining workers, environment degradation, uncertainty about private
sector investment and about adequacy of coal supplies. In this context,
the announcement of the NITI Aayog is most welcome. It will hopefully be
charged with the responsibility for coming up with a fresh vision and
policy framework for various sectors, especially those critical to the
economy. In doing so, it will take the government out of the
bureaucratic straight jacket in which it has clearly landed itself at
present. |
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Author is a Senior Fellow at the Centre for Policy Research and Founder Director of Pahle India Foundation. The most recent book is Exploding Aspirations. |
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