Coal Production Jumps 28 Per Cent In April On Strong Demand From Power Sector
Coal ministry data said while the total offtake of the coal sector was 70.8 MT during April, the power sector offtake touched 61.7 MT in the month
New Delhi: India's coal output soared by 28 per cent to 66.1 million tonnes in April amid high demand from thermal power plants as several parts of the country grappled with power shortage.
The overall coal production was at 51.6 million tonnes (MT) in April 2021.
"During the month of April, 2022 India’s total coal production stood at 661.54 lakh tons (66.1 MT)," the coal ministry said in a statement.
While Coal India (CIL) and its subsidiaries produced 53.4 MT of coal, production by Singareni Colleries Company (SCCL) stood at 5.3 MT and by captive mines at 7.3 MT during the last month.
According to the provisional data of the Ministry of Coal, while the total offtake of the coal sector was 70.8 MT during the month, the power sector offtake touched 61.7 MT in April. At the same time, coal supplies to the power sector from Coal India alone stood at 49.7 MT.
Coal supplies to the power sector by CIL were 15.6 per cent higher in the last month on yearly basis in the wake of high demand of the dry fuel from electricity generating plants.
The coal ministry stressed that it is planning to augment its dispatches further, especially to power plants in the coming months.
With higher output, CIL is aiming to increase its dispatches further, especially to power plants in the coming months.
Coal India, which accounts for over 80 per cent of domestic coal output, is one of the major suppliers of fossil fuel to the power sector.
On an average, the PSU supplied 1.66 MT of coal per day to power utilities in April which increased to 1.73 MT during last week. Average supply per day is at par with what was programmed by CIL for this sector during the first quarter of FY23.
The coal production by the PSU also rose 27.6 per cent to 53.5 MT last month over 41.9 MT in April 2021.
CIL's total offtake rose sharply to 57.5 MT in April, registering 6 per cent growth compared to 54.2 MT of same month last year.
The government had earlier said that the current power crisis is mainly on account of the sharp decline in electricity generation from different fuel sources and not due to the non-availability of domestic coal.
Coal Secretary A K Jain had attributed the low coal stocks at power plants to several factors such as heightened power demand due to the boom in the economy post-Covid-19, early arrival of summer, rise in the price of gas and imported coal and sharp fall in electricity generation by coastal thermal power plants.