Coal Buyers in Hoshangabad

 

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    Coal in the Indian economy is like carbs in our body. Coal buyers in Hoshangabad need the energy source and just cannot function without it, at least for now anyways. Coal is the most widely available, cheap, and densely packed energy source out there that is available locally across the globe and is easy to transport, without needing the complex logistical challenges and infrastructure requirements of either gas or oil. It is the major driver of efficient and economic use for most industries. It is still the strongest pillar for a stable grid electricity supply when compared to almost any other alternate in our modern advanced world. 

    Coal buyers in Hoshangabad still requires coal despite of various environmental friendly alternatives. When first used in the steam engine, it was heralded to be at the heart of the industrial revolution and modernization of the world. It is only when coal became widely adopted and coal buyers and users in Hoshangabad increased, that humanity started to realize its pitfalls. Same has happened with almost all the other alternates like nuclear which is touted as being too dangerous, with scary, long term aftereffects associated with radiation and spent fuel disposal. Renewable energy alternates like wind and hydro have had a hard time too, as even after being treated as nobly as coal by the coal buyers in Hoshangabad, eventually they have too shown their own limitations when deployed at scale. They tend to change and disturb the local ecosystem of the places where they are built significantly.

    Even the much touted solar has unfortunately a long way to go. Limitations include, a large area needed for installation and low efficiencies, which decreases with age.  They are productive only during a part of the day. Event this productivity is at natures mercy with cloudy days reducing it, dust covers leading to huge energy consumption in maintenance and abrasion, which erodes the efficiency even further. When deployed at scale, even solar panels have shown to disturb the existing ecosystem by becoming heat absorption sinks in desert locations (where they get the best sunlight exposure for the longest of times), needing to be cooled to maintain optimum performance, again resulting in lower net output. The promising battery technology is still has miles to cover before it comes in to change the narrative.

    Biomass or Agri waste is a another alternate of the Indian government as it can be used interchangeably with coal by the coal buyers in Hoshangabad with little or no processing. It is also locally produced and helps kill two birds (coal induced pollution and Agri waste disposal) with one stone. The challenges here are completely different with seasonality of the input, logistical nightmare of collection and transportation, non-standardized practices in processing and the most important one of aggregation of the lakhs of farmers to be able to provide regular quality in meaningful quantities to entice the industry to make a permanent switch from coal. Recently a policy shift by the government of India has made a definitive shift towards biomass, by mandating a 5% co-firing of biomass pellets with coal within one year, which needs to be ramped up further by coal buyers in Hoshangabad or by power plants. 

     

    With any Coal buyers at Hoshangabad or at any power plant, coal is burned to produce heat, which is then converted into steam by boiling water (losing almost 60% energy), thus generating electricity by turning massive turbines, then transporting the electricity to end use industries (suffering transmission losses) and where it is used in various equipment for heating purposes. Hence, common sense and economics prevail, and coal buyers in Hoshangabad take it directly to the end-use industries, where it can be burned in a controlled environment to directly use for the heating requirement, thereby avoiding massive scale of waste while having a smaller carbon footprint for the same application.

    Coal is an important source of energy for Coal Buyers in Hoshangabad and is critical for our energy security. It accounts for around 44% of our primary energy needs and powers around 75% of our entire electricity generation. Coal is so important for Coal buyers in Hoshangabad despite concerns around global warming, our government is refusing to let the coal industry die without a credible long term phase out plan. In fact, the government of India has communicated even to the US that coal will remain a steadfast pillar supporting the Indian economy for the coming decades. 

    Coal buyers in Hoshangabad or we may also say that the Indian economy is so dependent on the black gold, that the government predicts a rise in its consumption by around 50% in the coming years. The government has been steadily making strides towards a more market-based pricing approach in the benefit of coal buyers in Hoshangabad and a freer coal economy than what we see today. This is apparent by the various market friendly policy decisions taken by the Indian government which will result in a freely flowing coal economy in the coming future:

    1. Continuous auctions on rotational basis of coal mines for commercial mining with market linked pricing for the benefit of coal buyers at Hoshangabad Mines are continuously being added to the existing auction pool and auctions are being continuously being held by the government to keep investor interest strong in a bid to attract FDI to the space, along with domestic interest.
    2. They’ve recently allowed captive mines to sell 50% of their production in open market. This landmark policy change has the potential to unlock more availability of the fuel to the industry, with market linked pricing thus increasing supply sources and hence deepening the market.
    3. Coal India Ltd has been selling more and more coal being via the auctions route through MSTC and coaljunction. Government through this is hitting two targets with one stone by not having to subsidize energy costs of industries, which sell their product on market linked prices to coal buyers at Hoshangabad, often making a killing, via long term, under-priced linkages. Secondly, this has resulted in the company realising much better prices and increasing its revenue.

     

    Coal is a massive, 250 Bn $ sector in India. It is almost 10% of the Indian GDP. Our current consumption of almost a billion MT is met mostly by domestic mines operated by government-controlled Coal India Ltd and Singareni Collieries Coalfields Ltd and rest almost 25% via imports from various countries across the globe. Our major importing partners include Indonesia, South Africa, USA, Australia, and Russia.

    Last 5 Awarded Deals

    Coal Type Country Port Vessel/Mine Quantity
    Thermal Coal Indonesia Navlakhi Port 4800 GAR +/- 100
    Thermal Coal Russia Kandla Port 6100 NAR +/- 100
    Thermal Coal Indonesia Navlakhi Port 4800 GAR +/- 100
    Thermal Coal Russia Kandla Port 6100 NAR +/- 100
    Thermal Coal Indonesia Kandla Port 5200 GAR +/- 100

    All About Hoshangabad

    Hoshangabad, formally Narmadapuram, is a city and municipality in Madhya Pradesh, India. Both the Hoshangabad district and the Narmadapuram division have administrative headquarters here. It is located in central India on the Narmada River’s south bank. Hoshangabad is 76.7 kilometres from the state capital and Bhopal International Airport.

    Coal Dealers in Hoshangabad

    Narmadapur was the previous name for the city, which was named after the Narmada River. After Hoshang Shah Gori, the first monarch of the Malwa Sultanate, the name was changed to Hoshangabad. The Nerbudda (Narmada) Division of the Central Provinces and Berar, which became the state of Madhya Bharat (later Madhya Pradesh) following India’s independence in 1947, included the Hoshangabad district.

    The city is known for its magnificent ghats along the Narmada river’s banks, with Sethani ghat being one of the most popular. On Narmada Jayanti, the city comes alive with vibrant events. During this year’s events, the CM announced that the town will be renamed. Hindu saints visit a Satsang Bhavan on the ghat on a regular basis, giving devotional teachings on the Ramcharitmanas and Gita. In March 2021, the city was renamed Narmadapuram.

    The location of Narmadapuram is 22.75°N 77.72°E. It has a 278-metre average elevation (912 feet).

    The Narmada River forms the district’s northern boundary. Raisen and Sehore districts are located across this. The district of Betul is located in the south, while the Harda district is located near the district’s western and south-western boundaries, and the districts of Narsingpur and Chhindwara are located near the district’s north-eastern and south-eastern boundaries, respectively.

    The Hoshangabad district has a typical Central Indian climate. Due to its proximity to the Tropic of Cancer, the summers are hot and dry, with maximum temperatures ranging from 40 to 42 degrees Celsius (April – June). The monsoons then arrive, bringing with them a lot of rain. Winters are moderate and dry (November to February). The average elevation above sea level is 331 metres, and the annual rainfall is 134 centimetres.

    The city is around 75 kilometres from the state capital, Bhopal, and is well linked by road and rail. Hoshangabad railway station has train connections to all of the state’s main cities. Itarsi, one of its tehsils, is connected to all major cities throughout the nation due to its location at a railway junction and on the principal line of Indian Railways, the Delhi-Bombay route. The district headquarters is 18 kilometres away. Pachmarhi, Madhya Pradesh’s lone hill station and an administrative block of Hoshangabad district, may be reached by train from Itarsi to Pipariya and then by bus, cab, or personal car to Pachmari, or by bus or cab straight from Hoshangabad or even from towns like Bhopal and Indore. Itarsi, the largest railway station in the Hoshangabad district, is connected to all major Indian cities by train. The closest airport is located in Bhopal (BHO).

    On the banks of the Narmada River, Sethani Ghat is a significant city landmark. The confluence of the Tawa and Narmada rivers lies about 7 kilometres downstream.

    Narmadapuram has a population of 117,988 people, with 61,716 men and 56,272 women, according to the 2011 Indian Census. It has a higher literacy rate than the national average of 87.01 percent, with male literacy at 91.79 percent and female literacy at 81.79 percent.

    Tribal Department operates 960 primary schools, 207 middle schools, 69 senior secondary schools, and 9 schools. Pt. R L Sharma, a notable visionary, founded several educational institutions, notably the Narmada MahaVidhyalaya (NMV). There are eleven colleges in all, one of which is a polytechnic. Barkatullah University, Bhopal, is connected with all of the colleges. In the district, there is a Saksharta Program office that runs numerous literacy initiatives.

    This vast quantity of coal is getting delivered to a large number of coal buyer and coal consumer industries in Hoshangabad, across wide variety of sectors. This distribution of coal buyers and coal consumers industries in Hoshangabad can be observed based on majorly two factors: location and origin of coal.

    Let us pick up locational aspect of the coal buyers first:  

    1. Near to the Raw Material

    Coal is a cheap commodity (usually). The main part of the costing of coal, which forms up to 90% of the plant delivered cost to a consumer or coal buyer at Hoshangabad, constitutes of handling and transportation costs, thus making it very sensitive to its location of mining and final consumption. Thus, a large number of price sensitive industries tend to locate themselves nearer to the imported sources, ports or domestic sources, near mines. 

    a. India is blessed with a very long coastline, 7500+ Km. This gives us a distinct advantage in terms of commerce and the ability to import and    export via cheaper sea routes from global sources. As mentioned before almost 25% of our needs are satisfied by imported coal. Some of the    prominent coal ports include Mundra port, Kandla port, Tuna port, Navlakhi port, Dahej port, Hazira port, Magdalla ports in Gujarat. Dharamtar port, JSW Jaigadh port in Maharashtra, Marmugao port of Karnataka, Kochi port in Kerela, Ennore Port, Karaijal port in Tamil Nadu, Krishnapatnam port, Vizag port, Gangavaram port in Andhra Pradesh, Paradip port, Dhaamra port in Odisha and Haldia port in West Bengal.

    Large trading concerns with big banking limits and often overseas presence import coal from other countries in to India, taking advantage of pricing differentials between different grades and origins and delivery times. They are mostly present in major cities, and across various ports. They have operations teams to support the evacuation of coal from ports in a time bound manner and cater to the coal buyers in target markets.

    Availability of liquidity and low logistics charges have thus been a common characteristic of many coal buyer industries to blossom like Morbi in Gujarat for ceramics manufacturers or steel rolling mills near Vishakhapatnam in Andhra Pradesh or sponge iron or direct reduced iron, DRI plants in Odisha. 

    b. Domestic mines are mostly located near the central, eastern and south eastern parts of the country. They are operated mostly by Coal India     Limited (CIL) via its numerous subsidiaries including: 

        1. Northern Coalfields Ltd, NCL
        2. Central Coalfields Ltd, CCL
        3. Eastern Coalfields Ltd, ECL
        4. North Eastern Coalfields Ltd, NECL
        5. South Eastern Coalfields Ltd, SECL
        6. Western Coalfields Ltd, WCL
        7. Mahanadi Coalfields Ltd, MCL

    Apart from CIL, Singareni Collieries Coalfields Ltd, SCCL is also a state-owned coal mining company supplying to the Telangana and Andhra Pradesh markets. Presently, captive mines allotted to various end coal user companies or coal buyers at Hoshangabad including power plants, cement plants, steel companies etc, have been allowed to sell up to 50% of their production in open market. 

    These regional supply sources have attracted huge coal buyers like steel industry clusters of Chhattisgarh, ferro alloy manufacturers in West Bengal, aluminium smelters in Odisha etc, apart from smaller industries like dyeing, brick kilns, paper mills etc peppered across the landscape to take the locational advantage of the locally available coal and have set up shop and generated massive employment and created wealth. 

    Apart from coal other significant raw materials, also become major aspect for locational consideration of clusters for coal buyers at Hoshangabad. Examples of it can be seen in cement, burnt lime, plaster of paris clusters in Rajasthan and Andhra Pradesh, sugar mills of Uttar Pradesh,  

         2. Near Consumption Markets

    A large number of coal buyer industries in Hoshangabad are located nearer to the markets they serve. These include food processing and milk processing units in Uttar Pradesh & Haryana, dyeing clusters across Delhi NCR region, leather processors in Uttar Pradesh, brick kilns or bhatta’s across India, paper mills in Muzaffarnagar, Meerut and Punjab.

           3. In the historical trade hubs and routes

    Many industrial clusters have been historically built along major arterial roads connecting various large cities across India. Due to abundance of labor, easier access to clients and raw material these trade towns and major cities developed into manufacturing hubs having coal buyer clusters in and around Hoshangabad. Many examples of such coal buyer clusters are in various locations across the country like Indore in Madhya Pradesh, Kolhapur in Maharashtra, Allahabad in Uttar Pradesh, Patna in Bihar, Tirupur in Tamil Nadu etc.

    Let us now explore the Origin of Coal:

    Coal from different origins is used in a variety of applications across the coal buyers at Hoshangabad These uses vary with industry, its location and nearby supply sources.

    Indonesian coal: Indonesia is the world’s largest exporter of coal. With its landscape being criss-crossed by rivers, its location very near to the Indian sub-continent, it is relatively cheaper for us to source coal from here. Hence, it is no surprise that India is its second largest market. Indonesia is the largest source for our imported thermal coal needs. Being complimentary in its physical characteristics to our domestically available coal, Indonesian variety is often used for blending with ours. It is used in a very wide variety of industries across the country. 

    Coastal power plants have been built specifically to be able to utilize cheaper varieties of Indonesian coal to produce power. Steel rolling mills in Hoshangabad and Ludhiana in north and Telangana in south use it for heating applications. Indonesian coal is used by boilers in dyeing industry across Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan as a suitable, low sulphur, replacement to highly polluting petcoke. Ceramics industry of Gujarat and captive power producers across the country have been using fuel from Indonesia to run their industries.

    South African coal: South Africa is another large exporter of coal. India has been its largest market accounting for over 50% of its total exports. Grades of RB1 (6000 NAR), RB2 (5700 NAR), RB3 (5500 NAR) and 4800 NAR are exported from South Africa into India. This coal is used across India mainly by sponge iron makers and ferro alloy manufacturers. It is utilized for its high fixed carbon content almost as a chemical. It directly competes with domestic varieties in south and south-east India. 

    USA coal: US coal has the best net calorific value of any coal in the world. Originates from the regions of North Appalachian and Illinois Basin in US. It has been a favourite of the brick kiln owners across the entire northern belt of India. Cement manufacturers across the country have used US coal interchangeably with petcoke, a refinery by product, basis on pricing arbitrage, whenever available. Paper mills up north have also been occasional users, whenever domestic coal has been in shortage.

    Australian coal: It is mostly used by the cement industry, which act as swing buyers. This has also been often used by power plants across the coastline, whenever there is an arbitrage opportunity.

    Indian coal: Domestic coal is mainly mined by Coal India via its subsidiary companies and Singareni Collieries Coalfields Ltd. is mostly consumed within a short distance of the mine itself. These are the source for majority of the coal for coal buyers in Hoshangabad or rather across India. There are some smaller mines in Gujarat & Rajasthan also, which produce lignite, consumed by local coal buyer industries like bricks, dyeing, ceramics, paper etc.