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Coal Mining in India (Photo by Daniel Berehulak /Getty Images)
The Union Coal Ministry had written to state utilities and private power producers back on 25 February to build up their inventories.
Coal secretary Anil Jain had mentioned that fire might break out at Coal India’s pithead stockpiles due to self-ignition if coal was not lifted.
Subsequently, power secretary Alok Kumar and additional secretary Vivek Kumar Dewangan warned officials from Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra of possible load-shedding.
Yet, the utilities did not lift coal appropriately as they failed to anticipate a 12.7 per cent rise in power demand. They neither had the money to clear massive outstandings of Coal India nor did they want to assume the ‘carrying cost’ of inventories.
Hence, power plants were already searching deep for fuel when heavy rains disrupted mining late last month, and demand shot up owing to economic activities gathering further pace.
However, now the coal supply exceeds consumption as rains have stopped and mines have thus been dewatered, Times of India reports.