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In fresh blow to steelmakers, Jharkhand orders closure of some iron ore mines

Govt has ordered closure of 12 mines as their licences have expired

Reuters
Jharkhand has ordered the closure of 12 out of its 17 iron ore mines because their leases have expired, dealing a fresh blow to local steelmakers, some of which have been forced to import the raw material due to short supplies at home.
 
Mining curbs in states such as Goa and Karnataka along with mine closures in top producing Odisha have limited iron ore availability in the country, opening the door to more imports this year, which could help absorb some of the surplus in global supply.
 
Jharkhand was India's third-biggest iron ore producer in the fiscal year to March, with output of around 21 million tonne. The shut mines, including those of steel majors Tata Steel and Steel Authority of India Limited (SAIL), accounted for around 19 million tonne.
 
 
"They have sent notice to close 12 mines. These include mines of Tata Steel and Steel Authority of India Limited," an official of the Jharkhand state government said by phone from the capital Ranchi.
 
The notice was issued last week, he said, declining to be named because he was not authorised to speak to the media.
 
Asked when the mines would resume operations, the official said: "It depends on the government's policy."
 
Another official from the state government confirmed the mine closures.
 
In May, the Supreme Court ordered the temporary closure of 26 out of 56 operating mines in Odisha, also due to non-renewal of mining leases.
 
Eight of those mines in Odisha have since reopened, including the captive mines of Tata Steel, SAIL and state-owned Odisha Mining Corp, said Dhruv Goel, managing partner at industry consultancy SteelMint, based in Odisha.
 
SAIL produces 10-11 million tonne of iron ore annually in Jharkhand and Tata Steel around 5 million tonne, Goel said.
 
He estimated that both steelmakers had iron ore stocks that could probably last them around 40-45 days.
 
From 300,000 tonne in the past fiscal year, India's iron ore imports would probably reach 6-7 million tonne in the current year to March 2015 due to the mining restrictions, said Goel. Imports had already reached 2.6 million tonne in April to August, he said, citing government data.
 
That could help siphon off some of the surplus in the world market that has slashed iron ore prices by nearly 40% this year as big Australian and Brazilian miners have lifted output and demand has slowed in top buyer China.

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First Published: Sep 11 2014 | 3:44 PM IST

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