Despite been known as a country with one of the
largest coal reserves in the world, India is struggling to match the coal
demand supply equation, resulting in power crisis in the country. From 100
million tonnes in 2012, India's coal imports are slated to touch 220 million
tonnes by 2016, making it one of the largest coal importing countries in the
world. So what exactly is going wrong, given that the country is sitting on
reserves of over 100 billion tonnes, adequate to meet the demand for atleast
next 70-80 years? The answer is Operational Inefficiency in Coal India Ltd
(CIL) mining operations, which is mainly on account of low level of mechanization
in the industry. It is anticipated that Coal India's improvement in efficiency
will come only when the coal sector is opened for commercial mining because
that is when Coal India will see its competitors in the mining space and that
will force certain amount of market, certain amount of improvements under
market pressure. Coal India Ltd (CIL) lags international peers in productivity
despite having a high proportion of open-cast mines
The share of UG mines in India is far below the
global average, once the mainstay of coal production in India; the contribution
of UG mines in total production has declined to 7% in the past four decades of
nationalization. Between 1975 and 2014, CIL's UG production came down from 70
million tonnes to 36 million tonnes, lower than the spot sales of 54 million
tonnes in 2013-14. Although past few decades have seen quantum jump in the
level of Mechanization in Opencast Mining in India, not much progress has
happened in Mechanized Underground Mining; UG mining continous to use board and
pillar method as against long wall / continous mining technology. UG mines
contribute 20% of production in Australia, ~40% in the US and 90% in China.
China has maintained focus on underground mining as it results in less
pollution than open cast mining. Between 2005 and 2013, China ramped up thermal
coal production from 2.3 billion tonnes to 3.6 billion tonnes. This was done
while consolidating smaller coal mines to improve efficiency, resulting in
average mine productivity soaring almost three-fold.
India seems to be accelerating its effort to
transform the ailing coal sector in India. The Government has announced plans
to boost Coal India's annual production to the level of 1 billion tonnes by
2019 and this requires significant investment in mechanization of existing
mines and fast tracking mine development activity in newer mines. In order to
achieve the government vision, the new chairman of CIL has also clearly
indicated that his strategy would be to improve mine productivity through technology
upgradation in opencast mines with induction of high capacity equipment. In
underground mines, continuous miner technology will be leveraged in large
scale, long-wall technology at selected mines, man riding system in major mines
and use of tele monitoring techniques.
As the government successfully auctions captive coal
blocks to private & public sector, and CIL goes full throttle in ramping up
its production capabilities, demand for coal mining equipment is likely to
witness exponential growth. In order to quantify what the 1 billion coal
production target means for the mining equipment OEMs, Publisher is pleased to
launch its market research report "Demand Outlook on Mining Equipment
Market in India 2020". The intent of the report is to provide a detailed
analysis of what the current mining market size is and how it is likely to grow
by 2020. This report will be very useful resource for all mining equipment OEMs
active in India or those planning to capitalize on the emerging multi-billion
opportunity in India market. The report will be delivered entirely through
primary research and will be provide data & insights useful to take
informed decision on India market strategy pertaining to mining equipment
market in India.
Key Questions
Answered:
- What are the different mining equipment used in coal mining industry in India?
- What is the current level of mechanization in coal mining industry in India?
- What will be the demand for coal mining equipment by 2020?
- What is the mining equipment procurement practice followed by CIL and some of the leading coal mining companies in India?
- What are the successes/ failures related to technology in the mining industry in India?
- What is the avg age of mining equipment fleet in CIL across its mines?
- What is the overall retrofitting opportunity in coal mining sector in India?
- What is the overall market size and market share of different players across mining equipment?
- What are the typical margins derived in supplying mining equipment to public sector (CIL) vs private sector?
- What does MDO model means for mining equipment industry in India and will these lead to spurt in lease model for mining equipment as against ownership model?
- Which companies are planning to enter this segment in India and which are the companies that are looking to diversify into mining equipment business in India?
Spanning over 285 pages “Demand Outlook on Mining Equipment Market in India 2020” report
covers Coal Mining Industry in India, Key Regulations & Policies in Coal
Mining Industry, Mining Equipment market landscape, Maturity of coal mining
Industry in India, Factors that will drive mechanization & why mechanize,
Mining Equipment Market (Drilling and Blasting, Hauling, Loading, Transporting
& Processing), Projected demand for coal mining equipment in India by 2020,
Procurement Plan of Mining Companies, Retrofitting / Refurbishment Opportunity,
Competitive Landscape, Detailed Company Profiling. The report covered companies
are - L&T, GMMCO, BEML, Terex Vectra, Volvo
For
further information on this report, please visit-
http://mrr.cm/4ef
Find all Mining Equipment Reports at: http://www.marketresearchreports.com/mining-equipment
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