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Coal India to roll out forward auction on March 28

May have substantial impact on underground operations

Our Bureau

Kolkata, March 24 Coal India will roll out forward e-auction on coal on March 28.

Entry to the auction will be limited to consumers. The company will initially allocate seven million tonne for the forward auction.

The allocation may be increased to 15 mil tonne for 2008-09.

Mr K. Ranganath, Director-Marketing, told media persons here today that on behalf of CIL, the subsidiaries would offer their produce for forward auction beginning next week. Western Coalfields – a CIL subsidiary – had earned the distinction to be the first coal company to sell on forward auction.

Over all, CIL expects to sell approximately 40 million tonne of coal through spot and forward e-auction during the next fiscal.

Similar to the spot auction, the forward auction would also be launched on platforms provided by MSTC and MetalJunction.

According to Mr Ranganath, two-third of the total sales through forward auction will be underground coal.

Considering the better quality parameters and higher production cost of such coal, the reserve price for forward auction is also expected to be higher than the spot auction.

However, unlike the spot auction, the reserve price will be clearly underlined in the forward auction.

boost for underground mining

Interestingly, the forward auction may leave substantial impact on the bottomline of CIL’s loss-making underground operations. The coal major currently produces 33 million tonne of underground coal at an average cost of Rs. 1800 per tonne.

At an average price of Rs 900 per tonne, the company loses approximately Rs 3,000 crore annually on underground mining.

CIL is now targeting sell of a total of 12-13 million tonne underground coal through spot and forward auctions. A back-of-the-envelop calculation suggest that at an average of 40-50 per cent higher return (over and above the notified price) on one third of the total production from underground mines, the company is expected to reduce its losses by a few hundred crores.

Subsidiaries to benefit

According to sources, subsidiaries like WCL, South Eastern Coalfields, Eastern Coalfields and Bharat Coking Coal – having major underground operations – may be particularly benefited from the project.

Mr Ranganath though admitted the positive impact of forward auction on the underground operations, did not comment on the estimated gains to the company.

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