Jindal Steel to resume operations at Australian coal mine

Jayanta Mallick Updated - March 12, 2018 at 06:27 PM.

coal

Jindal Steel & Power Ltd’s step-down subsidiary in Australia, Wollongong Coal Ltd, will recommence operations at one of its mines in New South Wales soon.

The company has recently obtained regulatory permission for a five-year extension to the Wongawilli coal mine’s licence.

Wollongong Coal would resume operations at the non-operational mine shortly, the company indicated to the Australian Stock Exchange. It has awarded a two-year contract to a local contract miner to operate the mine.

“We will now begin preliminary planning and discussions with key stakeholders on the expectations that operations at Wongawilli will recommence in early 2016,” said the company’s Operations Manager, Rhys Brett.

Wollongong Coal has signed a two-year contract with Delta SBD, one of the largest contract mining companies in the Australian underground coal mining industry, to oversee and manage the recommencement of operations at Wongawilli.

Delta SBD will provide technical expertise, personnel and equipment services at the mine, as well as manage day-to-day operations.

Wollongong Coal, until the middle of last year, used to operate this coking coal mine on its own.

The company’s other coal mine Russel Valley is also non-operational since September last year. However, the New South Wales authorities have recently cleared its underground expansion project. The mine was making losses and operation was “not sustainable”, the company had said at the time of suspension of operation.

The company, however, had said that clearance of the underground project would “allow” it to “recommence extraction of high-quality coking coal''.

Published on January 5, 2016 08:40