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Coal India Output Sinks to Record Low as Monsoons Flood Mines

The slump in output and shipments at the world’s biggest coal producer is squeezing supplies to customers.

Coal India Output Sinks to Record Low as Monsoons Flood Mines
A worker carries a bag as he stands near sacks of coal at a coal wholesale market in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Coal India Ltd.’s monthly production dropped to a record low as the heaviest rains in 25 years flooded mines and hindered shipments.

The Kolkata-based state miner produced 30.77 million tons of coal in September, down 24% from a year earlier and the lowest in data back to 2013, according to a stock exchange filing Tuesday. Shipments dropped 20% to 35.18 million tons, the lowest in five years.

The slump in output and shipments at the world’s biggest coal producer is squeezing supplies to customers, including power plants, aluminum smelters and cement companies. Coal inventories at the country’s power plants have declined to a nine-month low, spurring higher imports.

“This year, the monsoon has been unusually long and that has affected output at mines,” said Rupesh Sankhe, an analyst at Elara Securities in Mumbai. “The workers’ strike last month also caused output disruption. The target of 660 million tons production this fiscal looks steep.”

Output at Coal India’s Talcher coalfields in Odisha is yet to return to its full potential, as its Bharatpur mine remains closed since an accident in July, according to Dikken Mehra, spokesman for Mahanadi Coalfields, a unit of Coal India that runs the mine.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rajesh Kumar Singh in New Delhi at rsingh133@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Ramsey Al-Rikabi at ralrikabi@bloomberg.net, Karthikeyan Sundaram, Jasmine Ng

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