The Centre on Sunday said it would pump Rs 1,50,000 crore for building four steel plants of 20-24 million tonnes combined capacity, in collaboration with the governments in four states.
"We aim for six million tonnes capacity for each," Union steel and mines minister Narendra Singh Tomar said in Rourkela, on the sidelines of an expansion review meeting.
Based on investment of Rs 6,000 crore for each million tonne of steel and associated cost for mining, the total investment will be in excess of Rs 1,50,000 crore.
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He said the plan for new capacity was to boost the 'Make in India' focus and take steelmaking capacity to 300 million tonnes by 2025 from 80-odd million tonnes.
Steel Authority of India (Sail) will invest in Chhattisgarh, Rastriya Inspat Nigam Ltd in Odisha, NMDC Ltd in Jharkhand and Karnataka. SAIL chairman C S Verma said the details of SPVs are yet to be worked out but for each project, two SPVs will be floated, one for mining and another for the plants.
Tomar was confident that new reforms and transparency in mining sector will help the steel sector come out of the current crisis.
He said all mines will now will be auctioned for sake of transparency. Now, with Mining and Minerals Development Regulation Amendment Ordinance, now mineral producing states will have no additional power to stop inter-state mineral movement, Tomar said.
This will help states like West Bengal in attracting steel plants that do not have iron-ore.
Presently, states impose restriction on inter-state movement of minerals to retain investment in their own states.
The minister was evasive about the POSCO project and also Khandadhar mining issue.
Replying to a question, the minister said, "The mines issue would be taken care under the new ordinance." However, when he was reminded that his ministerial colleague Jual Oram was against it, Tomar parried the question.
He also sidestepped a question on whether POSCO's proposed production is part of the centre's target of 300 MTPA by 2010.
Regarding a medical college to be built at Rourkela, the minister said, "SAIL is not in a position to manage a college because this is altogether a different activity. However, under CSR if the state government approaches SAIL, it will be considered."
When he was reminded about the declaration made by Prime Minister Narendra Modi here during his election campaign, he said, "Who can deny what the PM had declared... I believe the workers and other should get a good super specialty medical facility and we will see what SAIL can do about this."
Regarding the proposed cement plant at Purunapani which will use the slag from blast furnaces, Verma said, "Yes there was a proposal and nothing has moved in this direction. We will put this in the BoD meeting and see what can be done." Regarding the Bisra Stone and Lime (BSL) at Biramitrapur the minister said,
"Once the ordinance is imRs plemented it will clear the roads for the revival of the company."