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Indian Supreme Court cancels 214 coal scandal permits | Indian Supreme Court cancels 214 coal scandal permits |
(about 3 hours later) | |
India's Supreme Court has cancelled almost all the coal mining licences awarded by the government since 1993 in a corruption scandal which has cost the country tens of billions of dollars. | India's Supreme Court has cancelled almost all the coal mining licences awarded by the government since 1993 in a corruption scandal which has cost the country tens of billions of dollars. |
The court scrapped 214 of 218 licences awarded from 1993-2010 after finding they had been awarded illegally. | The court scrapped 214 of 218 licences awarded from 1993-2010 after finding they had been awarded illegally. |
The four units allowed to continue are linked to major state power projects. | The four units allowed to continue are linked to major state power projects. |
In 2012, federal auditors said India had lost $33bn (£20bn) because coalfield rights were sold off cheaply. | In 2012, federal auditors said India had lost $33bn (£20bn) because coalfield rights were sold off cheaply. |
Last month, the Supreme Court said the licences were illegal since they had been allocated in a manner which was "not fair and transparent" and without competitive bidding. | |
"The court has cancelled all the allocations except four," Attorney General Mukul Rohtagi told reporters outside the court on Wednesday. | |
Of the 214 cancelled licences, 168 relate to fields where work had yet to begin. They have been ordered to shut with immediate effect, Mr Rohtagi said. | |
The remaining 46 coalfields - where some work had begun ahead of actual mining - had been given six months to wind down their operations, he added. | |
The court also ordered mine owners who were yet to start operations to pay a fine to the government for "non-operation". | The court also ordered mine owners who were yet to start operations to pay a fine to the government for "non-operation". |
After six months, the government is free to hold new auctions for all the cancelled coal field permits, the court ruled. | |
The order sent shares of firms like Jindal Steel and Power and Hindalco, that have spent billions of dollars on projects around coalfields, tumbling. | |
India is one of the largest producers of coal in the world and more than half of its commercial energy needs are met by coal. | |
A BBC correspondent in Delhi says coal mines allocated before 1993 will continue to operate, but Wednesday's ruling has major implications for the country's energy sector where demands are constantly growing. | |
In its 2012 report into the sale of coalfields, federal watchdog the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) had said that private and state companies had benefited from the allocations. | |
Opposition politicians accused the then Congress government of "looting the country" by selling coalfields to companies without competitive bidding. | |
But the Supreme Court ruling has implications for most of India's main political parties which governed India between 1993 and 2010, including the current Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led government. | |
Correspondents say mining became a source of massive corruption after India opened up mining to private companies without strong and independent regulation. |