SECL aims at 8 proposals worth Rs 3,100 crore to expand coal extraction

News Delhi (Natural Energy News): The shifting will enable power plants in most locations in the northern and western areas to obtain the benefit of the newly notified rail accommodations for ranges of more than 1400 km.





SECL, the arm of Coal India, has executed first-mile connectivity '' projects with a capital outlay of Rs 3,100 crore with estimated fuel outlay, especially incremental production, proposed to increase Mahabharata firm's output to 1 billion. Under the scheme. Ton.


Related Article: FAC to decide if coal mines can start mining before taking forest clearance


The move will help power plants in most places in the northern and western regions to take advantage of the recently notified rail concessions for distances of more than 1400 km.


"The corporation is performing numerous extraction operations under First Mile Connectivity (FMC) to vacate coal, particularly large scale accumulative generation under the proposed 1BT system. FMC projects (8nos.) to be performed with a figured capital outlay over Rs. 3,100 crore." South Eastern Coalfields Limited (SECL) said in a report.


The company said that due to this move, the end of the generator would reduce the price of coal and foreign exchange could be maintained by replacing coal imports with abundant domestic supplies.


Related Article: Commercial mining: Auction of coal blocks can fetch Rs 20,000 crore revenue per year


He said the new SILO at Gevra, Deepka and Kusmunda would provide adequate clearance infrastructure with high levels of production along with fast loading systems, in-pit conveyors, surge bins, large capacity bunkers and rail linkages etc.


In the absence of decisive overall environmental benefits over the additional cost of power generation, the government recently shipped power plants with mandatory coal washing to reduce ash in coal supplies.


"This will bring to more explicit sharing of coal-based thermal energy supply and environmental responsibility in the environment between miners and generators, respectively," he said.


This adds to the larger role of suppliers to ensure quality and size in offerings to balance environmental concerns. This is likely to capture the demand for supply easing from sources, which would require heavily capable infrastructure for coal extraction.


Related Article: Modi government bets Rs 43,000 crore on decarbonising coal


Coal India provides 80 percent of the domestic coal generation. It is eyeing one billion tonnes of production by 2023-24.

Post a Comment

0 Comments