The suggestion by Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi sent shares of some of the big companies that hold coal blocks sharply higher on speculation this could lead to the court avoiding a wholesale cancellation of blocks as feared earlier.
Rohatgi also told a Supreme Court hearing that the government was open to re-auctioning the coal blocks if their allocations are revoked.
India's highest court ruled last week that the country's decades-old method of granting coal mining concessions was illegal and arbitrary, putting investments worth billions of dollars at risk.
A further hearing was being held on Monday.
The award of more than 200 coal blocks to steel, cement and power companies has been at the centre of the so-called "Coalgate" scandal, estimated in a 2012 audit report to have cost the exchequer as much as $33 billion.
Jindal Steel and Power Ltd, Hindalco Industries Ltd and Sesa Sterlite Ltd are some of the firms that have already spent heavily on steel and power plants based around the coal blocks.
Jindal shares rose 6 per cent, Hindalco 4 per cent and Sesa Sterlite about 2 per cent in late afternoon trading on Monday. The broader stock market was up 0.8 per cent.
Coalgate and India's crony capitalism
Coal crunch: A chance to revamp, reallocate and revive
Was Birla allocated coal blocks as per norms: Court asks CBI
United Bank of India declares Vijay Mallya as wilful defaulter
India bans Finmeccannica from future contracts but allows ongoing ones