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Coal India To Revise Prices From Feb

Kolkata, Jan 27: World's largest miner Coal India Ltd. (CIL) will announce the new set of coal prices this month, before the acting chairman N.C. Jha retires on January 31.The decision comes after the Coal

PTI Published : Jan 27, 2012 21:18 IST, Updated : Jan 27, 2012 21:23 IST
coal india to revise prices from feb
coal india to revise prices from feb

Kolkata, Jan 27: World's largest miner Coal India Ltd. (CIL) will announce the new set of coal prices this month, before the acting chairman N.C. Jha retires on January 31.


The decision comes after the Coal Ministry formally asked CIL to relook its January 1 pricing.

“We were planning to revisit the pricing in March. But the Coal Ministry had formally sent a letter on January 25 asking us to relook the prices now to prevent any major impact from the previous prices regime. But, GCV (gross calorific value) mechanism will not be rolled back,” Mr. Jha said.

“The revised GCV pricing will be done in consultation with Coal Ministry officials within end of the month,” he said, adding that January 1 pricing was also done with the ministry's consultation.

“As switchover from useful heat value (UHV) concept to GCV had happened under me, so I'll address the price issue before I retire,” Mr. Jha told PTI.

The revised pricing that CIL is working on would benefit or reduce the price shock mainly in C, D, and upper E grades of coal under UHV category, he said. Mr. Jha accepted that the January 1 pricing benefited CIL by close to 12.5 per cent in additional revenue and the new pricing will eliminate most of it.

Besides, he said, the new wage agreement will have additional burden of at least Rs 4,000 crore annually at a time when CIL production is slipping from the target. The revised GCV pricing of the coal will deviate from the Coal Ministry's and Planning Commission's long-term roadmap to link Indian coal with international coal.

“The January 1 pricing was based on discount on import price but now the pricing would be done on what the consumers were paying in UHV regime,” Mr. Jha said.

CIL had attempted to reduce the gap of landed international coal price with domestic coal, which was as high as close to 75 per cent in certain coal varieties like C, D and part of E grades. However, Mr. Jha conceded that gradually, the new concept will achieve its goal gradually in future.

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