why india is grappling with shortage of natural resources - business today

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SENSEX 25473.89 -109.80 -0.43% NIFTY 7626.85 -29.55 -0.39% US$  R59.32 0.13 GOLD  R26704 39 0.15% Type Stoc k Nam e Mutual Funds Lookup Type Commodity Print Copy Kindle iPad June 22, 2014 Print Copy iPad June 2014 Wed, June 11, 2014 22:12 IST BEST B SCHOOLS TOP EMPLOYERS BT 50 0 MOST POWERFUL WOMEN BEST BANKS OTHERS ARCHI VES search...  HOME  BIZ WRAP MARKETS MONEY INDU STRY TECH CASE STUD  Y OPINION BLOGS SLIDESHOWS VIDEOS Home / Archive / Business Today / FEATURES / Dec 22, 2013 / Stor  y Paucity Amidst Plenty N. Madhavan, K.R. Balasubramanyam and Anilesh S. Mahajan  Edition:  Dec 22, 2013 STORY T OOLS Change font size Print this story E-Mail this story Comment  Why a country flus h with natural re so urces finds itself grappling with their  shortage. TAGS: natural resources  | mining  | coal shortage  | mining in India  | CAG  | Lakshmi Niwas Mittal  |  ArcelorMitt al  | Vedanta  |  Anil A garwal  | GM Rao  | GMR Resource crunch: Mining trundles along at Orissa's Talcher coal field, which has the highest coal r eser ves in India. PHOTO: VIVAN MEH RA Billionaire Lakshmi Niwas Mittal has the uncanny ability to work successfully with governments of all kinds across the globe. That, and his unbridled ambition, have enabled him to set up or acquire steel factories in 20 countries. But the man who created the world's largest steel empire from scratch tasted the bitter fruit of failure when he decided to invest in his country of birth - India. In a bid to capitalise on India's huge iron ore deposits and rising steel consumption, Mittal in 2005 announced plans to set up a steel project in Jharkhand that year and in Orissa the next. Later, he proposed another mill in Karnataka. The total intended investment was $30 billion. In July this year, ArcelorMittal, M ittal's c ompany, scrapped its $12-billion mill in Orissa  after having failed to acquire land and iron ore mines for seven years. Its other projects have not yet been called off, but are also facing delays. Mittal's decision came just a day after South Korean steelmaker Posco, the world's fifth-largest, abandoned a $5.3-billion project in Karnataka for similar reasons. The two developments highlight how the Indian mining environment is scaring investors away. So, what is going wrong? Mining has faced multiple problems in recent years. There have been problems in acquiring land for new mines and delays in government approvals. Increased judicial scrutiny following corruption scandals in the allotment of mining blocks and environmental degradation caused by illegal mining have made matters worse. MUST SEE How s tockbrok er Radhakishan Damani also bu ilt a retail biz Vintage jewellery, though expensive, is back in fashion What the WhatsApp deal means for F acebook in India Leaderspeak: Zuckerberg on buying WhatsApp STAY CONNECTED WITH US ON INDIA TODAY GROUP InToday India Today Aaj Tak Hea dlines Today Busi ness Today Me n's Health Wonder Woma n Cos mopolitan Oye! 104.8FM

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8/20/2019 Why India is Grappling With Shortage of Natural Resources - Business Today

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SENSEX  25473.89

-109.80 -0.43%

NIFTY  7626.85

-29.55 -0.39%

US$   R59.32

0.13

GOLD   R26704

39 0.15%

Type Stoc k Name

Mutual Funds Lookup

Type Commodity

Print Copy

Kindle

iPad

June 22,

2014Print Copy

iPad

June 2014

Wed, June 11, 2014 22:12 IST 

BEST B SCHOOLS TOP EMPLOYERS BT 500 MOST POWERFUL WOMEN BEST BANKS OTHERS ARCHIVES search...  

HOME   BIZ WRAP MARKETS MONEY INDUSTRY  TECH CASE STUD Y OPINION BLOGS SLIDESHOWS VIDEOS

Home / Archive / Business Today / FEATURES / Dec 22, 2013 / Stor y 

Paucity Amidst Plenty 

N. Madhavan, K.R. Balasubramanyam and Anilesh S. Mahajan  Edition: Dec 22, 2013

STORY T OOLS

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Print this story

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 Why a country flush with natural resources finds itself grappling with their shortage.

TAGS: natural resources  | mining  | coal shortage  | mining in India  | CAG  | Lakshmi Niwas Mittal  | ArcelorMittal  | Vedanta  |  Anil Agarwal  | GM Rao  | GMR

Resource crunch: Mining trundles along at Orissa's Talcher coal field, whichhas the highest coal reserves in India. PHOTO: VIVAN MEHRA

Billionaire Lakshmi Niwas Mittal has the uncanny ability to work successfully with governments of all

kinds across the globe. That, and his unbridled ambition, have enabled him to set up or acquire steel

factories in 20 countries. But the man who created the world's largest steel empire from scratch tasted

the bitter fruit of failure when he decided to invest in his country of birth - India.

In a bid to capitalise on India's huge iron ore deposits and rising steel consumption, Mittal in 2005

announced plans to set up a steel project in Jharkhand that year and in Orissa the next. Later, he

proposed another mill in Karnataka. The total intended investment was $30 billion.

In July this year, ArcelorMittal, Mittal's company, scrapped its $12-billion mill in Orissa after having

failed to acquire land and iron ore mines for seven years. Its other projects have not yet been called off,

but are also facing delays. Mittal's decision came just a day after South Korean steelmaker Posco, the

world's fifth-largest, abandoned a $5.3-billion project in Karnataka for similar reasons.

The two developments highlight how the Indian mining environment is scaring investors away. So, what

is going wrong?

Mining has faced multiple problems in recent years. There have been problems in acquiring land for 

new mines and delays in government approvals. Increased judicial scrutiny following corruption

scandals in the allotment of mining blocks and environmental degradation caused by illegal mining have

made matters worse.

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 A sim ple and transparent pol icy for natural res ources , auctioned

through a revenue-sharing model, can be a win-win s ituation for 

the government, industry and the people, says Vedanta group

Chairman Anil Agarwal. PHOTO: Rachit Goswam i

Click here to Enlarge

The Comptroller and Auditor General of India, the country's top auditor, said in a report last year that a

flawed coal mine allocation process resulted in a notional loss of Rs 1.86 trillion (one trillion equals100,000 crore) to the exchequer.

Following the report, the Central Bureau of Investigation filed cases against several companies

including leading ones such as Jindal Steel & Power and Hindalco, as well as a few company

executives and former government officials. The companies and executives have all denied any

wrongdoing.

No wonder the mining sector shrank 0.6 per cent in both 2011/12 and 2012/13 - at a time when the

overall economy was growing. In fact, had the government managed the mining sector better, one of 

the biggest problems it is grappling with today - the large current account deficit - may not have arisen.

How? India imported coal worth over $15 billion in 2012/13 while its iron ore exports were negligible

compared with about $7 billion a couple of years ago. Had there been no coal imports and had iron ore

exports continued, the current account gap of $88.2 billion in 2012/13 (4.8 per cent of gross domestic

product) would have been a relatively comfortable $66.2 billion (3.6 per cent).

That's not all. "Developing our natural

resources and the resultant growth of 

manufacturing can generate enough funds for 

infrastructure, alleviate poverty and create

employment for at least five crore people,"

says Anil Agarwal, Chairman, Vedanta

Group, who is also facing problems investing

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NOT ENOUGH: India accounts for 

 jus t 0.5 per cent of the USD 10.7

billion (global budget in 2010) global

spending on mineral exploration.

Source: Ernst and Young

THE DICHOTOMY

India is rich in natural resources. The country

produces as many as 87 minerals including

fuel, metallic, non-metallic, and atomic

minerals.

 Among the minerals, reserves of coal, iron ore

and bauxite are vast and will last decades.

India's coal reserves of 293 billion tonnes are

the fourth largest in the world and account for nearly 10 per cent of global deposits. Bauxite

reserves of 3.5 billion tonnes and iron ore deposits of 28.5 billion tonnes are the fifth and seventh

largest, respectively, in the world.

But is India taking advantage of this geological windfall? The answer 

is a resounding no.

Take coal. Sixty years ago, India and China had comparable coal

reserves and output. China's annual output now exceeds three billion

tonnes while India extracted 558 million tonnes of the dry fuel in

2012/13. This fell well short of the 772.84 million tonnes the country

needed that year (see Increasing Shortfall). As a result, India had to

import 140.63 million tonnes. Still, supply fell 59 million tonnes short of demand. Only consumers in coastal areas found it feasible to import

as high inland transportation costs made it unaffordable for others.

"When we have coal reserves that will last 200 years why are we not

questioning the need for imports," says V. Raghuraman, former 

principal energy analyst at the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).

Inevitably, coal shortage is hurting power generation. More than half 

the country's electricity generation is coal based, as will be 85 per 

cent of the new capacity coming up by 2016/17. The country lost 15.1

billion units of electricity due to non-availability of coal in 2012/13,

contributing to a peak power deficit of 11 per cent and hurting

economic activity.

"We are importing coal to take care of the immediate fuel

requirements," says Arup Roy Choudhury, Chairman of state-run

NTPC, the country's largest power producer. "But this cannot be a

long-term option as global prices of coal are increasing and will add to

the cost of power generation."

Iron ore mining is buried in even bigger problems. Until a couple of 

years ago, India was the world's third-largest exporter of the mineral,

earning $7 billion from it annually. Exports surged from 62.57 million

tonnes in 2003/04 to 117.37 million tonnes in 2009/10. The sector 

expanded rapidly to meet insatiable demand from China in the run-up

to the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Indeed, the industry threw caution to the winds. A politician-industry-

bureaucracy nexus led to mining leases being allotted in violation of 

norms. Also, in the absence of an oversight body, illegal mining

became rampant and environmental considerations were

disregarded. This, in turn, led the Supreme Court to intervene. The

court banned iron ore mining in Karnataka in July 2011 and in Goa in

October 2012.

The ban led to a fall in iron ore output to 135.8 million tonnes in

2012/13 from 167.2 million tonnes in the previous financial year, and

exports crashed to 18.37 million tonnes. Iron ore imports,

inconceivable until recently, are now a reality. They touched three

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million tonnes in 2012/13 and are likely to exceed five million tonnes

this fiscal year.

In April 2013, the Supreme Court ordered the cancellation of 51

mining leases in Karnataka. It also allowed 57 mines to resume

production but with an annual cap of 30 million tonnes. All 90 mines in

Goa remain shut and are unlikely to reopen at least until early next

year.

The impact of a drop in iron ore production on local steel producers

would have been higher but for a slowdown in the steel industry. "Hadthe steel industry grown at 10 per cent as against the current three

per cent, it would have been in a real crisis," says A.S. Firoz, Chief 

Economist at the Ministry of Steel's Economic Research Unit.

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Coal imports cannot be a long-term option as global prices of 

coal are increasing and will add to the cost of power generation,

says NTPC Chairman Arup Roy Choudhury. PHOTO: Shekhar 

Ghosh

Bauxite mining is also caught up in land acquisition and environmental issues. Production of this raw

material, used in making aluminium, has fallen since 2007/08. As a result, aluminium output is not

enough to meet demand. The country produced 1.72 million tonnes aluminium in 2012/13, lower than

demand of 1.97 million and the target of 2.06 million tonnes.

"No new bauxite mine has come up in the last 25 years," says Sushil Kumar Roongta, Managing

Director, Vedanta Aluminium. The company has been trying to expand its Lanjigarh refinery in Orissa

but suffered a setback recently when, at village council meetings endorsed by the Supreme Court,

tribals in Niyamgiri hills rejected bauxite mining in their region for the project.

THE WAY FORWARD

Industry players and analysts say a multi-fold solution is required to revive the mining sector. Some

executives suggest the government should auction mines rather than allot them to private companies.

This, they say, will boost mineral output and minimise the scope for corruption.

"A simple and transparent policy for natural resources, auctioned through a revenue-sharing model,

can be a win-win situation for the government, the industry and the people," says Vedanta's Agarwal.

The government should also replace outdated mining laws, says Anjani Agarwal, Partner and National

Leader for metals and mining at consultancy Ernst & Young (E&Y). The new laws should encourage

commercial mining, address environment and social issues, share benefits of mining equitably and

bring in technology to modernise the sector, he says.

The Mines and Minerals (Development and

Regulation) Bill 2011, which will replace a

1957 law, addresses some of these issues

but the Lok Sabha has yet to pass it. Without

the backing of the law, the National Mineral

Policy 2008, which tried to address a few

mining issues, remains ineffective.

The legal ambiguities have delayed approvals

and mining leases. As many as 65,337 mining

applications are pending with states, apart

from those with the Centre. The central

government says the decision on granting

mining permits lies with state governments

while the states blame a policy paralysis at the

Centre for their indecision. Even in cases where mining leases have been allotted years ago, they are

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The ratio of proven resources to total resources is dism al in

India. There is a huge need to convert the vast resources into

proven deposits, says GMR group Chairman G.M. Rao. PHOTO:

Vivan Mehra

now being questioned. In November, the coal ministry cancelled the mining licences for 11 blocks held

by corporate houses including the Tata group and Jindal Steel & Power. Also, new mining areas are

located either in forests or regions inhabited by tribal people and permission to mine is hard to come

by. As a result, investors are jittery and are holding back investments.

Coal Secretary S.K. Srivastava admits that environment and forest clearances and land acquisition

problems pose the biggest challenges to mining. "We are working with states to get through these

hurdles quickly," he says.

Industry executives argue that allowing private players to mine coal for commercial purposes will boost

output and help improve productivity. Currently, state-run Coal India is the only company allowed tomine coal for commercial purposes. But it is not terribly efficient, especially compared with companies

globally.

 According to a study released in November by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and

Industry, Coal India produces 1,100 tonnes of coal per employee a year. US coal miner Peabody

Energy and China's Shenhua Energy extract 36,700 tonnes and 12,700 tonnes per employee,

respectively, the study showed.

"We have a monopoly in coal mining and that should go," says Suresh Prabhu, former power minister.

"It should be replaced with an efficient mining environment which will set new global benchmarks."

B.K. Chaturvedi, Member (Energy), Planning

Commission, says it is time to revisit the CoalMines (Nationalisation) Act, which nationalised

coal mines in the 1970s. "Coal policy is in a

dire need of revamp," he adds. G.M. Rao,

Chairman, GMR Group, favours opening up

the coal sector the way the oil and gas

sector's New Exploration Licensing Policy did.

"This will encourage private companies, Indian

and foreign, to enter the coal sector, bringing

in the latest technology, equipment and

established practices for a substantial

increase in mining of coal," he says.

P.C. Parakh, former coal secretary, recalls

making a proposal to allow commercial mining by private companies after Prime Minister Manmohan

Singh took charge of the coal ministry following Shibhu Soren's resignation in 2004/05. "The idea was

to have two or three large private-sector companies mining about 200 million tonnes of coal each," he

says. The proposal did not go through as the government at the time was supported by Left parties,

which were opposed to the idea. "Had we done it then we would not be struggling with a coal shortage

now," he adds.

 An independent regulatory regime is a prerequisite before the

government can think of allowing private players into

commercial coal mining. The Cabinet cleared the Coal

Regulatory Authority Bill 2013 earlier this year. Coal Secretary

Srivastava says the ministry is ready to table the bill in the

winter session of Parliament. But time is running out. This

session will be the last one of the current Lok Sabha - general

elections are due by May - after which all pending bills will

lapse.

Opinion is divided, however, on allowing private players into

commercial coal mining. Firoz, the steel ministry official, says

private players will also have to tackle the same problems

Coal India faces in acquiring land, getting environmental and

forest clearances, overcoming infrastructural challenges and

local resistance.

Industry is divided too on the efficacy of the new land

acquisition law that comes into effect from January. "The law

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makes land very expensive. Industry has to pay four times the

market price," says Raghuraman, the former CII executive.

That doesn't worry Vedanta's Roongta. "We have no

problems with compensation," he says. His worry is that the

law decrees the land has to be returned if no development

work takes place for five years. "We do not get all the

approvals in this time period," he says.

Venkatesan

Subramanian, Vice

President and GlobalLeader for mines

and minerals

practice at

consultancy Frost &

Sullivan, says

companies run from

pillar to post and

engage middlemen

to get approvals. "A

single-window

system with the

participation of all

concerned ministrieswill get things

moving and boost

investor confidence,"

he adds.

E&Y's Agarwal says India must spend more on mineral exploration. According to an E&Y study, India's

exploration budget is just 0.5 per cent of the global spend. Rao concurs. "The ratio of proven resources

to total resources is dismal in India. There is a huge need to convert the vast resources into proven

deposits," he says.

 Also needed is a strong oversight body to monitor mining activities. This is crucial to avoid illegal mining

and environmental degradation. Raghuraman notes that though mining does impact the environment ,

resources have to be mined for economic growth. He adds the government must announce a clear 

policy which balances the need for mining with environmental concerns. "Today, environmental issues

have been left to the Supreme Court to tackle. The government should come out with a plan to penalise

errant miners, monitor mining closely in the future and help lift the court's ban quickly," he adds.

Raghuraman also wants the government to

improve infrastructure facilities. He points out

that construction of some railway lines and

roads that pass through forests and Naxal-

dominated areas in Chhattisgarh, Orissa and

Jharkhand - the states with the biggest

mineral deposits - has been stuck for years

because of delays in approvals and threats

from Naxals. "The government has to take a

call on how to handle this," he says.

No doubt the mining sector faces plenty of problems. But the problems are not insurmountable. The

government must send the right signals to investors that it is serious about modernising its mining

sector. And it must send those signals quickly. Or else, investors like ArcelorMittal and Posco will keep

pulling out of India.

(Follow the authors on Twitter: @Madhuta, @krbaloo and @anileshmahajan)

For more news from Business Today, follow us on Twitter @bt_india and on Facebook at

facebook.com/BusinessToday

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