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CIL awaits clearance to start coal bed methane extraction

New Delhi: The Cabinet may soon take a call on whether a fresh lease is required by state-owned Coal India for extracting coal bed methane (CBM) which remains untapped in want of clarity, a top official on Sunday said.
To expedite gas production from coal seams, however, the government had earlier permitted Coal India to mine CBM through a notification.
"Both the ministries (Coal Ministry and Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas) sat along with the others....It has been sorted out that there is no need for a separate lease and that CCEA note is still pending. So, once the CCEA decides that then we will go ahead," Coal Secretary Susheel Kumar said in a interview.
Coal Bed Methane is a form of natural gas trapped in coal seams underground. Such gas can be extracted by drilling into the seam.
"The CCEA (Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs) note is about just to say that there is no need for a separate lease. You know they (Petroleum ministry) had issued some notification and we said that notification needs to be amended the way we are saying. That amendment will have to be done for which it is pending in CCEA," the secretary explained.
"But essentially it (the notification) says there is no need for fresh lease," Kumar explained.
On the question that when will the CCEA take a call on this, he said "I think anytime. There was some clarification needed why only for the Coal India. So, our response has been because Coal India is a PSU and large amount of area under CBA acquired with it".
The coal ministry, he said, has identified CBM as priority area.
The secretary said gas is the remit of Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, so the issue came is that if Coal India wants to extract gas then it has to take a fresh lease of the same area under the relevant act from the petroleum ministry.
"We were of the view that since (with regard to) our public sector Coal India, the acquisition of land is under the CBA (Coal Bearing Areas (Acquisition & Development) Act, 1957). And rather it is not acquisition. It vests. So, it is not the lease. It vests with the central government when CBA Act is applied and the the acquisition takes place.
So, it is unlike the normal land acquisition act where you acquire and state government gives you a lease. State government does not give any lease here," he explained.
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