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Coal auction: First round pulls in Rs 83,662 crore for government

Second tranche of coal auctions to begin from Feb 25

India has large coal reserves but only one pure-play mining company, Coal India

IANS New Delhi

On the seventh day of auction Friday of coal blocks whose allotments were cancelled by the Supreme Court, the government said it will start the second tranche of auctions by February 25. The government has till now raised nearly Rs 84,000 crores.

"The second trench will start from February 25 (and run) till April 2," Coal Secretary Anil Swarup said in a press conference here.

He said that 27 blocks have been allocated for the unregulated sector, while 56 blocks will go to the regulated power sector.

"Will either auction or allocate 83 blocks by March 31," he added.

The government has till now raised Rs.83,662 crores through the e-auction of coal blocks, the seniormost ministry official said.

 

"The majority of Rs 83,662 crores raised will go to poor states. Orissa is expected to get Rs 607 crores, Madhya Pradesh will get Rs 39,900 crores, Maharashtra will get Rs 18,900 crores," Swarup said.

On the sixth day Thursday, Jindal Steel won back the Gare Palma II and III mines in of Chhattisgarh is crucial for as those deposits. The mine produces 6.25 million tonnes a year, making it the company's biggest by output,

Jindal's winning bid of Rs 108 a tonne was in the reverse auction for the Gare Palma mines, where the lowest bidder wins, to help keep low the cost of electricity generated.

Meanwhile, the ongoing auction has vindicated CAG's criticism of the way the natural resources was allocated by the previous government, Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said Friday.

"The last CAG report on the coal block allocation was unfortunately unnecessarily criticised but today the figures and the way in which the coal block allocation has been designed by this government in a very transparent manner and has shown two things," she told reporters on the sidelines of an event.

"Certainly the CAG's position has been vindicated but I am underlining the larger issue here.Our position has been vindicated," Sitharaman added.

In a 2012 report, the Comptroller and Auditor General estimated coal block allocations during the previous UPA period led to the government losing Rs 1,86,000 crorse. The coal blocks were earlier allocated through a screening committee.

After the Supreme Court last September cancelled the allocation of 204 mines, the government decided to auction the blocks.

Nineteen blocks have so far been auctioned in the first tranche, the last day for which is February 22.

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First Published: Feb 20 2015 | 2:58 PM IST

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