Both Bharat Aluminium Company Ltd, a subsidiary of Sesa Sterlite, and HZL were allotted coal mines to run their power plants.
“This judgment means that the probability of Balco getting the mining lease signed for its coal mine reduces substantially.
"This will impact future profitability of Sesa Sterlite’s aluminium business. Our estimates were not factoring in any benefit from the captive coal mine for Balco and as such our EPS (earnings per share) estimates for Sesa Sterlite will stay unchanged with this development,” said an analyst at CLSA, a global brokerage firm.
Sesa Sterlite and Hindustan Zinc did not comment officially on the development, though insiders say both companies are studying the legal implications.
Sesa Sterlite’s Rampia coal block, for its 2,400 Mw power project, was de-allocated by a ministry group for lack of progress but the coal ministry extended tapering coal linkage by three more years, as the coal block was in a no-go area.
Interestingly, HZL, operating a 474 Mw power plant with coal from the Madanpura South coal block in Chhattisgarh, had moved the Bilaspur bench of Chhattisgarh High Court against the government’s
SC's coal block ruling could add to woes of power cos
SC verdict on coal blocks worries bankers
I feel completely vindicated: Ex-coal secretary
Sensex up over 100 points; heavyweights gain
Rs 1-lakh-cr market-cap club now has 18 firms