Tag: Mr. Jayanta Roy

Govt working towards Atma Nirbharta in Mining & Steel & to make India Global Manufacturing Hub: Steel Minister

The mining, coal, and petroleum sector has been one of the prime focus sectors in terms of development and reforms in the past few years. Our Steel Consumption per capita globally has grown over the years and our market has more capability deliberated Mr. Dharmendra Pradhan, Hon’ble Union Minister of Steel, Petroleum & Natural Gas In National Mining Summit, Theme: Reforms for Atma Nirbharta in Mining Sector organized by PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Mr. Dharmendra Pradhan while talking about the reforms mentioned the bidding system has helped in the equal distribution of the revenue. He mentioned that we need to exploit, access, and monetize the natural resources at the same time leveraging technology, transparent bidding process making India cost-competitive so that the raw material is available with ease.

He emphasized that while India is becoming self-reliant, we need to make India a global manufacturing hub for which we need to monetize the mineral resources of the country and make the process more simplified. We need to make this sector more profitable so that business investments can be increased in this sector.

Mr. Faggan Singh Kulaste, Hon’ble Minister of State for Steel mentioned that India is the land of resources. While some of the resources are available abundantly, many need the intervention of international markets. Under the visionary initiatives of Shri Narendra Modi Ji, we are progressing towards making India Atmanirbhar and, for the same, there are a lot of reforms and developments taking place in the mining sector.

He discussed that the government wants to get the intervention of the private sector in the auctions and India needs to work in the coal sector. Government is in constant talks in introducing systematic reforms, leverage ease of doing business at the same time help in boosting the sector and economy, making India self-reliant in the times to come.

Mr. Jayanta Roy, Senior Vice President, ICRA while presenting the knowledge report talked about the current status of the mining sector, key challenges, recent government interventions, key opportunities, rebooting for reforms 2.0, and changes proposed in the MMDR Act 1957. He also talked about the importance of the mining sector in the economy, employment generation, and its linkage in other sectors as well.

Talking about some of the challenges, he deliberated about the slow regulatory approvals, risk in capital blockage, environmental clearance, limited investment in mineral exploration, sub-optimal investment in technology, and others. He gave a detailed outlook about the key policy changes implemented recently in the mining sector paving way for the betterment of the industry with reforms such as iron ore and commercial coal mine auctions are helping India to step up in the global market.

Mr. Sanjay Aggarwal, President, PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry in his presidential address complimented the Government of India for announcing bold structural reforms in the Mining sector that will go a long way in making India Atma Nirbhar in mining, coal, and steels sectors.

He mentioned that the reforms are likely to boost the production of various minerals by introducing competition, transparency, private sector participation, and an increase in foreign investment. The government has announced a composite exploration-cum-mining-cum-production regime under which 500 mining blocks will be offered through the open and transparent auction route through amendments to the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act. He also discussed some silent features of the reforms announced that will help in boosting the mining sector in times to come.

Mr. Aggarwal emphasized that the Summit aims to bring policymakers and bureaucrats from Central and State Governments and entrepreneurs on a single platform to deliberate on the benefits of the reforms announced by the Government recently and give recommendations for circumventing challenges posed by the recent disruption in the sector.

Mr. Anil Chaudhary, Chairman, Minerals & Metals Committee, PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry while giving an industry outlook, its challenges, and ways forward, deliberated about the role of mining in the development of the nation. He mentioned that India is blessed with good resources of Iron in the Country and, it is one of the largest miners of iron. We need to accelerate the requirements for the betterment of the economy for which we need reforms. He mentioned that Atma Nirbhar Bharat is a concept that everyone has to carry forward and, the mining sector can be one of the major contributors in making India self-reliant.

Mr. Naveen Jindal, Co-Chairman, Minerals & Metals Committee, PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry delivered a formal vote of thanks to all the delegates and participants and talked about the need for stringent policies in the coal sector so that it benefits all and particularly the Industry itself.

The session was moderated by Dr. Yogesh Srivastav, Principal Director, PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and was attended by many industry stalwarts around the world.

ICRA comments on July 2020 Steel demand

By Mr. Jayanta Roy, Senior Vice President, Group Head, Corporate Sector Ratings, ICRA Limited on July 2020 Steel demand.

By Mr. Jayanta Roy, Senior Vice President, Group Head, Corporate Sector Ratings, ICRA Limited on July 2020 Steel demand.

“Steelmakers are poised for a sequential uptick in performance in Q2, aided by a gradually improving domestic demand and softer coking coal costs that would benefit blast furnace operators. The July 2020 official data indicates that even during a seasonally weak monsoon period, domestic steel demand sequentially increased by over 10% month-on-month, which suggests a gradual recovery of demand following the relaxation of nationwide lockdown. However, a return to the pre-COVID level of demand would take time, as steel consumption in July 2020 is still 29.06% lower than the same in July 2019.

In line with favourable international price trends, steelmakers announced multiple price-hikes of about Rs. 3000/MT in Q2 so far for hot-rolled coils. Additionally, a QoQ drop of $36/MT in coking coal prices is likely to more than offset the recent hikes in iron ore prices of close to Rs. 700/MT announced by merchant miners, and result in a sequential improvement in operating margins by about 5 percentage points in Q2 FY2021.

The steel industry’s capacity utilisation levels have steadily inched higher from the lows of 27% in April 2020 to 67% in July 2020, but are still lower than the last year’s average of 77%. The official data also points to lower exports in July 2020 compared to the previous month. If the trend continues, steelmakers would gain from higher sales volumes and a richer product mix, with the share of domestic sales gradually increasing and less remunerative exports gradually decreasing.”