CIL takes initiative to produce sand from overburden at much cheaper price

Production of sand has already started, the coal ministry said in a statement.

Coal India
CIL's corporate headquarters in Kolkata
Press Trust of India New Delhi
3 min read Last Updated : Jul 27 2021 | 8:19 PM IST

State-owned CIL has taken an out-of-the-box initiative to produce sand from overburden at a much cheaper price, the government said on Tuesday.

During opencast mining of coal, the strata lying above coal seam is known as overburden, comprising clay alluvial sand and sandstone with rich silica content.

The initiative will not only help in minimising environmental pollution due to sand siltation from overburden, but will be also an option for getting cheaper sand for construction purpose, it added.

Production of sand has already started, the coal ministry said in a statement.

A roadmap of next five years has been drawn to maximise the output of sand from different coal producing companies under Coal India Ltd (CIL) and to become one of the major suppliers of sand in near future, it added.

In this effort, CIL aims to reach a production level of around eight million tonnes of sand within the next five years by commissioning 15 major sand plants in its different coal producing subsidiaries.

By the end of current fiscal, CIL envisages to have nine out of 15 plants with a production of around three lakh cubic metres.

This effort will not only help the society at large but also help in minimising river bed mining of sand.

The overburden is removed to expose and extract coal from beneath. After completion of coal extraction, the overburden is used for back filling to reclaim the land in its original shape.

While extracting overburden from top, swell factor of the volume accounts for 20-25 per cent. Initiative has been taken to utilise at least 25 per cent of overburden in converting to sand by crushing, sieving and cleaning.

The very first initiative of such conversion has been taken by Western Coalfields Ltd (WCL), a subsidiary of CIL.

Initially, a pilot project was launched where sand was extracted through machines erected departmentally. This sand has been offered to Nagpur Improvement Trust at a much cheaper price for constructing low-cost houses under the Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana (PMAY). The price of sand is almost 10 per cent of the market price with better quality.

On huge success of the project and with growing demand of cheaper sand, WCL launched commercial production by commissioning the largest sand production plant of the country near Nagpur.

This unit produces 2,500 cubic metres of sand per day at about half the market price.

The major chunk of the sand produced from this plant is being given to government units such as NHAI, MOIL, Mahagenco and other smaller units at one-third of the market price, it said.

Rest of the sand is being sold through open auction in the market which is helping locals to get sand at a much cheaper price.

The use of overburden has also minimised the volume of land required for overburden dump.

Besides, WCL is selling overburden for road construction at a cheaper price to NHAI and others. Two new plants in Chandrapur district of Maharashtra have been planned by WCL, which is likely to be commissioned by the year end.

CIL accounts for over 80 per cent of domestic coal output.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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Topics :CILSand mining

First Published: Jul 27 2021 | 8:16 PM IST

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