Consumers compelled to buy coal at high prices to keep plants running: CCAI

The statement comes amid certain parts of the country witnessing power outrages in the wake of fuel shortages
Coal India registers record 160 MT output in Apr-Jun this fiscal
Coal India registers record 160 MT output in Apr-Jun this fiscal

New Delhi: Expressing concerns over consumers being compelled to buy coal at high prices just to keep their plants running, the Coal Consumers' Association of India (CCAI) has sought the government's intervention to provide ailing industries a new lease of life.

The statement comes amid certain parts of the country witnessing power outrages in the wake of fuel shortages.

"The average bid price of coal in a recently conducted spot e-auction by MCL (Mahanadi Coalfields Ltd) rose as high as 800 per cent above the notified price.

"It is evident that some of MCL's valuable customers are compelled to procure coal as such abysmally high premiums only for sustenance of their respective plants while many industries had to take a decision to be out of league in this auction due to soaring bid prices," CCAI said in a recent letter to coal minister Pralhad Joshi.

MCL is a subsidiary of Coal India Ltd.

While the allocated quantity as per the fuel supply pact is not being supplied to the industries, the coal companies are successfully conducting spot e-auctions where the spot prices have scaled up to unprecedented high levels since March, making it unviable for many non-regulated sector (NRS) consumers to book their required quantity, the CCAI said.

The country's industrial sector is going through a serious crisis due to lack of coal supply especially via rail mode since last September. This crisis has further aggravated over the last few months.

The subsidiaries of CIL "are allocating coal to the NRS consumers at trigger level (75 per cent of the monthly scheduled quantity (MSQ)) under Fuel Supply Agreement (FSA) from February 2022… under the current circumstances, restricted supply is causing an even greater coal crisis for the industries leading to production cuts and the imminent closure of plants," the letter said.

"Under the ongoing coal supply crunch for the NRS which has triggered imbalance and poor coal materialisation in the sub-sectors, it is requested that interplant transfer of coal within the same group company that have multiple plants with separate linkage could kindly be considered," it said.

This may facilitate plants with extremely critical coal stock to sustain themselves by obtaining some quantities from other plants with better coal-stock within the same group.

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