India coal strike could hit grid

File photo: Amit Dave.

File photo: Amit Dave.

Published Jan 6, 2015

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New Delhi - Five major unions of mine workers at state-run Coal India Limited (CIL) began what they said could be their biggest ever strike Tuesday, to protest a government plan to allow private entities to mine and sell coal.

Coal meets more than 50 percent of India's energy needs, and mines run by CIL feed all but four of the 86 thermal plants.

“This will probably be the biggest ever strike in the industry. The power sector may be hit by the prolonged strike,” Gurudas Dasgupta, general secretary of the All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC), said.

AITUC is one of the five unions that called the five-day strike.

The walkout began with the first shift Tuesday and is scheduled to end with the third shift on January 10, Dasgupta said.

CIL has more than 500 000 permanent and contractual employees.

The government recently renewed an ordnance for the re-allocation and e-auction of 204 coal blocks, after the Supreme Court cancelled a 2004 allocation that it said did not follow legal procedures.

The auctions would be open to private bidders.

India is the world's third-largest coal producer, after China

and the United States.

Sapa-dpa

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