The activity in the primary market has gathered steam with as many as a six companies expected to launch their initial public offerings (IPOs) this month
The government holds 78.55 per cent of share in the company and the rest is public shareholding
CIL's output between Apr 2017 and Feb 2018 stood at 495.09 mt, 7% lower than the 531.32 mt target set by the coal ministry. Similarly, sales volume is set to fall 3% short of the 541.60 mt target
Despite opening up of the coal sector to private miners, Coal India's dominance in the field is expected to remain firm as the power sector will continue to bank heavily upon this state-owned coal monolith.Coal India officials said that the company has a mandate to supply atleast 75 per cent of the produce to the power sector and the rest can be offered to others like cement and steel; however, the private miners are most likely to be exempted from the clause."The reform states that private miners can sell or utilise coal in any manner they like. Thus, compared to us, the power sector is not a mandated priority for them. Being liberalised, they are at will to sell coal where they will find the best price discovery", a senior Coal India official said.With Coal India currently routing its supplies majorly to the power sector, the cement and steel plants are bearing the brunt of coal and railway rake shortage.Also, a second Coal India official opined that private companies will be more ..
With Coal India now prioritising availability of thermal coal to the power plants by streamlining both its road and rail supply network, its plans of acquiring a 20-25 per cent stake in an Australian firm which could have ensured steady procurement of coking coal, has been put on the backburner.Apart from prioritising steady production across its mines, the company is now closely coordinating with Railways to make 288 rakes available each day for supply of the black diamond to the power plants - an exercise which is the top priority now. Towards the end of the last year, resulting from dearth of railway rake availability, coal stocks with the power plants hit rock bottom spiralling the energy sector into a crisis. Thenceforward, Coal India had to step up despatches on a war footing.An official told Business Standard that coordination with the railways for steady despatches to the power sector would ensure that instance doesn't repeat in the future. It has now drawn up a mine-wise ...
Improving realisations, closure of unviable mines to drive earnings
Of the 11 mines, five are deallocated blocks and six are fresh mines
The company has set a 600-million tonne coal production target for 2017-18
The world's largest coal miner, Coal India, will be shifting its billing mechanism for the consumers in-line with the global trend from the coming fiscal year. As per the plan, the sales bills would be raised based on the actual consumption of the gross calorific value (GCV) which is expressed as kilo calorie per kg of coal.Currently, the consumers are charged based on the coal grade. Under the prevalent system, a GCV range is decided for a certain grade of coal and prices are fixed as per the grade. But, under the new system, the consumer will pay exactly for the GCV he/she is consuming.At present, around 17 such grades with variable GCV ranges are in vogue.As per a Coal India official, the current pricing mechanism for a particular grade is based on the mid-point of the GCV range and is priced accordingly. However, under the revision it will be done away with.To ensure the same, Coal India will be introducing third party sampling of all despatches including auctioned coal. Based on .
Following the revision of wages of around 300,000 workers in the company, it faces an outgo of an estimated near Rs 60 billion
The stock surges 5% to Rs 303 on BSE in early morning trade after the company said its board approved revision of non-coking coal prices with effective from Tuesday, January 9, 2018.
After 76% rise in Q3, prices may fall in Q4
CIL has identified mines with a production capacity of 908 million tonnes so far
After a 76 per cent increase over the average notified price in the e-auctions during October-December last year, Coal India might see auction prices falling as demand from the power sector is expected to remain muted in the fourth quarter (Q4) of the current fiscal year.Analysts are of the view that power demand usually declines in the winters and with Coal India stepping up its sales, the country's power generators would be returning to near-normalcy latest by mid-February."In turn, this is going to affect demand from the power sector in the e-auctions", an analyst from Motilal Oswal said.In November 2017, despatches to the power sector rose by 9.1 per cent to touch 40.9 million tonne (mt) against the despatch of 37.6 mt in the year-ago period. Backed by robust demand from this sector, special forward e-auction prices rose by 35 per cent over the notified prices of the coal grades in November while for the Q1-3 period, the increase over notified price stood at 25 per cent.As per ...
Availability of coal stocks with the country's thermal power plants is expected to normalise to a large extent by mid-January as state owned Coal India Ltd (CIL) has been able to step up production and debottleneck its supply network to a large extent after freeing up the railway rakes.Senior company officials told Business Standard that while previously the company's average daily production stood at 1.4 million tonne (mt) a day, they were able to scale it up to 1.8 mt a day and in the next few days, daily production would touch 2 mt a day."However, the target is to despatch over 2 mt coal a day so that we are able to sell over 600 mt of coal annually", a senior CIL official told this newspaper.As per the official, CIL's average rake loading has been hovering around 247-250 rakes a day which ensured that CIL is able to despatch bulk quantity of coal to power plants which are outside the pithead area.The coal stock situation in the country's thermal generators has started showing ...
Coal India, which accounts for over 80 per cent of the domestic coal production, is eyeing 1 billion tonnes output by 2019-20
With petcoke and furnace oil use banned in states of Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Haryana and as other states may follow, concerns for cement manufacturers is likely to remain elevated. But, it is a blessing in disguise for India's largest coal producer, Coal India. The ban comes at a time when fuel costs are on the rise, and will see further increase with petcoke being banned. Since coal linkages are not easily available, among the few options for companies will be to source coal from e-auctions. Linkage coal is visibly cheaper than one sourced from e-auctions, while both are not cost-efficient compared to petcoke. Landed cost of imported coal work out to be 35-40 per cent higher than petcoke prices, highlights Tina Virmani of Kotak Securities. Binod Modi of Reliance Securities feels that considering 20-25 per cent cost difference between imported petcoke and coal costs, the per tonne costs of making cement can increase by Rs 50-150.Nevertheless, as cement companies try to source ...
A Coal India official said ONGC employees were getting better pay than Coal India as ONGC revised its wages in 2007
Average price realisation from e-auction and long-term fuel supply agreements also remained firm
In its quest to emerge as a cleaner company, the coal ministry has prioritized development and adoption of clean coal technologies like coal to liquid, coal to polychemicals and others besides other priorities.A statement issued by Coal India, quoted coal secretary Susheel Kumar, as stating that the ministry has emphasized on environmental management and responsible mining, quality of the product and safety of the labourers working in the mines as the other priority areas for the company.The official was in the city to attend the 43rd Foundation Day of Coal India.The statement issued noted that the grade slippage between promised quality and delivered quality, which has been one of the key concerns of the coal consumers across segments, will be dealt with while the company will also ensure that environmental norms and workers' safety procedures are followed diligently. Optimistic about Coal India generating better profits in the future as coal demand goes up, Kumar said that Coal ...