Will PPP in coal mining provide value for money?
Government of India has proposed public private partnerships
(PPP) for coal mining in India and expects the business model to enhance
production capacity, which has been a concern as the supplies have fallen short
of demand consistently and have led to import dependence. But does PPP in coal
mining have the potential to provide value for money for the Government.
It has been proposed that Coal India Limited (CIL) will be
the nodal and executing agency for coal mining PPPs. Development of coal mining
projects of CIL through PPP aims to add about 60-70 million tonnes per annum
capacity in the next five years. CIL has been using contract miners for
overburden removal and in some cases for coal winning for some time and have
been successful in harnessing private efficiencies. These contracts have
however tended to be short term contracts with lives up to 5 years. The concept
of Mine Developer and Operator (MDO) has been evolving and the public
electricity utilities have tied up with MDOs for turnkey development of coal
mining projects but the efficacy of the model is yet to be established. MDO
contracts that have been awarded have been varying in terms of scope of work
for the contract miners, the most successful ones have been those in which the
ground has been prepared with all clearances and approvals taken and land
acquired and possessed for the contract miner to begin excavation and
production.
There is potential value for money in the PPP in coal mining
due to the fact that private sector tends to utilize capital assets including
mining machinery, beneficiation plants and handling facilities better and
extracts better efficiencies. Human resources productivity in private mining
may also be higher even though there have been reports of labour exploitation
in contract mining with long hours of work with lower salaries and little other
benefits. There may also be some value in better procurement processes and
lower overheads in cases of private contract miners.
The potential for value for money in PPP can be unlocked
only by ensuring the risk perception of the project and its associated risk
premium does not exceed the efficiency, utilization and productivity gains of
private partner. That precisely has been the cause of concern for several
contract mining tenders floated by the State government owned utilities. When
the scope of work for contract miner tends to include any or all of the
exploration works, mine planning, obtaining clearances and approvals, land
acquisition, rehabilitation and resettlement, the risk premium of the project
tends to exceed the probable gains from private efficiencies.
The proposed PPP with CIL as the counterparty willing to
invest in mining equipment, infrastructure and associated capital outlay may
still have low value for money since the scope of private partner includes risk
enhancing components.
The reason for such a structure of PPP is the perception
that private partner may find getting clearances and approvals and acquiring
land easier that the public or government-owned partner. The recent experiences
in coal and other sectors do not conclusively support such an opinion. The reason
for such risk perception of these activities emanate from the need to pay more
than legally due to various stakeholders involved; these payments considered
difficult for public partner but easier for private partner; inevitable in any case.
This is fundamentally wrong assessment. Several of Indian and globally renowned
contract miners in view of their reputation and compliance requirements will
never consider these extra-legal payments and hence, they may not able to start
the project on expected timeline if they at all bid and win such a contract. Given
such complexities in project development, PPP in coal mining may not hold much
value for money and may not be successful as much as expected.
PPP in coal mining is the only way to enhance production
given the current statutory framework that prohibits private participation
except for captive mining by approved end users. If that were to continue, the externalities
in clearances and approvals, land acquisition, R&R need to be simplified,
made objective and predictable. The recent land acquisition legislation has
attempted at land acquisition process fair and equitable and thus predictable but
its efficacy is not proven as yet.
PPP in coal mining is sure in for rough weather.
dipesh@jenissi.org

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