Business Standard
Monday, Nov 23, 2009
 
drived banner
drived banner
  Advanced Search
Feedback | RSS
Content Guide
Follow us on  
||Companies & Industry||||||| 
 Section Home | News Now | Today's Paper | Q&A | People in the News | Industry News | Features | The Compass | Research & Analysis | Opinion | Corporate Results
Home > Companies & Industry Live Markets | Smart Portfolios II
  Search:

Coal crisis forces Nalco to cut aluminium output
BS Reporter / Kolkata/ Angul July 08, 2009, 0:44 IST

Acute coal crisis has forced National Aluminium Company (Nalco) to shut down one 120 Mw unit of its captive power plant (CPP) at Angul. This has cut down power supply to the company’s smelter at the same location by about 90 Mw resulting in 13.6 per cent reduction in daily aluminium output.

 
 
Related Stories
News Now
-State explores new locations for wind power projects
-Better export prices to push Nalco's profit this quarter
-Nalco may get permit for bauxite mine
-Rio scraps Chinalco deal for $21 bn share sale, BHP venture
-Mining in sequence
-Nalco aluminium park at Angul under cloud

Faced with short supply of coal from the Mahanadi Coalfield Limited (MCL), the company authorities shut down one unit of its 960 Mw CPP on Monday. The CPP has a total of eight units.

This has reduced supply of power to the company smelter, also at Angul, by about 90 Mw. As a result, the aluminium output has come from an average of 1100 tonne per day to about 950 tonne. Nalco, at present, is operating 735 pots in the smelter keeping another five as stand by, official sources said.

With the crisis deepening an emergent meeting was held between Nalco and MCL officials at Talcher yesterday to carve out steps to save the power plant which had recently begun power generation from all the eight units instead of seven earlier to meet the excess demand arising out of expansion of smelter plant capacity.

“It will take five to six days to restore the eighth unit after coal supply is resumed on expected line”, said the official. He said, it was decided in the meeting with the MCL officials that the company will get 8,000 to 10,000 tonne of coal per day from linked Bharatapur mine while another 7,000 tonne coal will be made available by railway network from other mines in the Talcher coalfield.

Keeping in view such exigencies, Nalco has decided to import 2.5 lakh tonne of coal this year in addition to two lakh tonne of coal for which order has already been placed. Out of the ordered coal, 50,000 tonne of washed coal has reached the plant. Some imported coal has also arrived at Paradip port which awaits transportation to Nalco.

Nalco sources said, they are importing coal to meet the gap in supply of local coal, but they cannot entirely run the CPP on imported coal as it would escalate the cost. The company uses imported coal in the plant after blending it with cheaper MCL coal at the ratio of 15; 85.

Arrow Other Stories     
- Sensex makes remarkable recovery, regains 17K
- L N Mittal doubles his stake in Ophir Energy
- Indian handicraft firms to participate in Munich fair
- Microsoft eyes Indian smartphone mkt
- RIL Hazira unit bags 'Excellent Energy Efficient Unit Award'
More  
Tags : Nalco | CPP | MCL |
  Read Business news in 
  Get financial advisory and solutions for your projects
  Holidays starting at a delightful EMI of Rs 3481
  Switch on and say hello to Monday morning !
  Your dream home can now be a reality.
  Visit Fortis for a preventive health check-up & get a 20% discount.
  Follow the ups and downs of your investments. Try our new Portfolio Tracker
  Kolkata Dock \ Freight contract for the British Gurkhas Nepal
  Find how Midsize Businesses use ERP to gain competitive advantage
  Trading in Forex is now as easy as 1-2-3
  Discover an economical and cost effective way to market your products and services
  Giftwithlove.com: Same day delivery of Flowers and Cakes to India
  Download the E-book on the Future of Business Intelligence
  Learn Best Practices for improving customer satisfaction
  Know your customers better... download the free e-book on CRM
   Discussion Board / User Comments    
Display Name  Email-Id  
Post your comment
Most Popular
Read
E-Mailed
Commented
   
- Indian CIOs more progressive than global counterparts: IBM study
- IAF orders more Tejas LCAs to replace MiG-21s
- High carryover and potential for breakouts
- We are not trying for a monopoly: HAL chairman
- Old questions
 
 More  
BS Poll
Cast Your Vote
 
   
 
Should India's defence sector be thrown open to foreign investments?
  Yes  No
Submit

  Hot Searches  
 
Amitabh Bachchan | N Chandrasekaran | Swine Flu | Mukesh Ambani | Anil Ambani | TCS | Infosys |  Air India |  Duronto |  Pranab Mukherjee | Sonia Gandhi | Congress | Rahul Gandhi |  Bigg Boss |  New Pension Scheme |  Service tax |  Excise duty |  Sebi | Tech Mahindra |  Ramalinga Raju |  Satyam |  Reliance  |  RBI |  GDP |  Gold |  Ratan Tata |  ICICI |  |  B-School | DLF  Sensex |  Tax calculator | Home Loan  | Bollywood | Personal Finance |  inflation | oil prices |  World Bank | Reliance Infratel |  HDFC |  Barack Obama  
 
  Member Area Write to the Editor RSS Archives Advanced Search
  Subscribe to BS print product BS e-paper Newsletter Portfolio Tracker
  BS Products BS Hindi BS Motoring
FOR HOT PRODUCTS
BS Bazaar.com
Home | Markets & Investing | Companies & Industry | Banking & Finance | Economy & Policy | Opinion
Life & Leisure | Management & Marketing | Tech World
About Us | Partner With Us | Code of Conduct | Careers | Advertise with us| Terms & Conditions | Disclaimer | Site Map | Contact Us | Feedback