State-owned Coal India Ltd (CIL) on Monday said it has clocked a 17 percent growth in composite opencast production in July over the same month a year ago. Further, the company is expecting the production to rise post monsoon in view of the positive growth trend in the Over Burden Removal (OBR).

OBR implies removing top soil to expose the coal seams and make them mining ready. The composite production was 110.40 million cubic metres (M CuM) for July, against 94.4 M CuM in July 2019, CIL said in a statement.

This is sum total of OBR and the amount of coal produced through opencast mines.

“For CIL which relies on opencast mines for 95 percent of its entire annual coal output, OBR is a crucial performance indicator which exposes the coal seam for future production at short notice,” said a senior executive of the company.

CIL’s OBR alone in July 2020 surged by 23.1 percent over the same month a year ago, and progressive July 2020 OBR growth jumped by 12.4 percent. Coal India has excavated 88.46 M CuM of OBR in July this year as against 71.85 M CuM in July 2019, the PSU said in a statement.

“We expect our production to go up post monsoon especially with the positive growth trend in the over burden removal,” a senior executive of the company said.

In volume terms, CIL arm Northern Coalfields Ltd (NCL) accounted for more than a third of Coal India’s entire OBR, registering a growth of 36.7 percent in July 2020.

NCL excavated 31.73 M CuM of OBR in the month. Coming back strongly, CIL arm Mahanadi Coalfields Ltd (MCL) doubled its OBR excavation in the current year’s July to 12.48 M CuM, clocking a growth of 103 percent as against 6.14 M CuM in July last year.

CIL subsidiaries Bharat Coking Coal Ltd and South Eastern Coalfields Ltd also recorded growths of over 25 percent and 21 percent, respectively in the removal of overburden.

CIL despatched 43.39 million tonnes (MT) of coal in July, the highest for a month so far in the ongoing fiscal. Its coal sales in July compared to June increased by 1.8 MT, registering 4.3 percent growth with industrial activity showing signs of revival.

Despite COVID-19 induced slowdown and a three-day strike in the first week of July, CIL was able to ramp up its supplies for the month, it said.

Supplies to non-power sector at 11.09 MT in July grew by close to 21 percent compared to 9.18 MT in July last fiscal, the statement said.

“Our production and offtake were weighed down by the COVID-19 led siege since the beginning of FY21. But for the first time in this fiscal, the downward growth in a month fell below double digit in both the facets, in July 2020,” a senior executive of the company said.

CIL produced 37.36 MT coal last month, down by 3 percent compared to July 2019. But, importantly, the slump in growth constricted sharply compared to June 20 when it was 12.8 percent.

Coal production picked up in the last week of July, registering a growth of 15.7 percent compared to corresponding period a year ago. Falling trend in coal sales also has been narrowing down gradually from 26 percent in April 2020 to 7 percent in July.

 

 

Source : Money Control

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