Business
Another Rs.12,600 crore from Day Three of coal auctions
New Delhi, March 7
The government stands to
gain an additional Rs.12,600 crore on Day Three of the coal auction on
Saturday, potentially swelling its kitty by nearly Rs.145,000 crore from
the 19 rounds in the first tranche and the three rounds thus far in the
second leg, as per the latest data.
The Tara coal block in
Chhattisgarh went to Jindal Power and the Dumri block in Jharkhand to
Hindalco in the latest round. The third block on offer, Nerad-Malegaon
in Maharashtra, went to Indrajit Power.
"Hindalco is highest
bidder at Rs.2,127 (per tonne) for Dumri and Jindal Power at Rs.126 (per
tonne) for Tara coal block," Coal Secretary Anil Swarup tweeted, as
bidding ended.
This final bid cost works out to Rs.9,800 crore for the Tara block and Rs.2,100 crore for Dumri.
Indrajit Power bid the highest for Nared Malegaon at Rs.660 per tonne - or a little over Rs.660 crore.
Three more blocks will be put up for auction when the bidding starts on Sunday.
The
auctions follow the Supreme Court's decision in September last to
cancel the allocation of 204 coal mines allotted between 1993 and 2010.
Under the bidding process, participants are required to submit an initial financial bid along with the technical details.
On
the actual date of the e-auction, the qualified bidder is permitted to
anonymously submit as many final price offers as desired. While the
highest bid can be viewed, the name of the bidder will not be divulged.
The
auction has a clause that extractable reserves of the allotted coal
mine cannot exceed 150 percent of the annual coal requirement of the
specified end-use plant over a period of 30 years.
In the second round of the auctions, government has put up 15 blocks which are under the 'ready-for-production' category.
For Tara block, it was reverse bidding while for the other two it was forward bidding.
The
auction is on the basis of tariff-based reverse bidding where the
end-use is power generation, and forward bidding for production of
steel, cement and generation of power for captive use.
While the
criteria for calculating the floor price for bidding is based on state
miner Coal India's (CIL) price of coal of the same grade, the auction
also has a ceiling price for power sector bidders to keep the lid on
power tariffs.
The Lok Sabha on Wednesday passed the coal
allocation bill providing for vesting mining leases to successful
bidders through a transparent bidding process.
The Coal Mines
(Special Provisions) Bill, 2015, provides for allocation of coal mines
and vesting the right, title and interest over mine infrastructure
together with mining leases to successful bidders through a transparent
bidding process. Before the house passed the bill, amendments sponsored
by the opposition were negatived.
The bill replaces an ordinance brought by the government in the inter-session period.
Earlier,
speaking at the school of international and public affairs New York's
Columbia University on Monday Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said the
yields of upto one lakh crore from the first few ongoing coal block
auctions was proof of the improved governance brought in by the NDA
coalition.
He added that the coal mine auctions would raise much
more money, underlying the fact that what the Comptroller and Auditor
General had said about coal block allocation losses of Rs 1.86 lakh
crore was indeed an "underestimation".
The CAG statement during
the UPA government had led to a political uproar in the country and the
opposition had painted the ruling party as being tainted with
corruption.
The coal ministry on Sunday also received 107
applications from state-run undertakings like NTPC, SAIL and the Damodar
Valley Corp for allocation of 43 coal blocks.