UPDATE 2-India’s Sesa sees 6-fold jump in iron ore output, Goa mining set to resume – by Krishna N Das (Reuters India – July 3, 2014)

http://in.reuters.com/

NEW DELHI, July 3 (Reuters) – India’s Sesa Sterlite Ltd expects its iron ore output to surge six fold this fiscal year as it resumes production in Goa in September after a 19-month mining ban in the state, an executive of the country’s top private iron ore miner said.

A pick up in production as mines in India’s biggest iron ore-exporting state restart could hurt global prices of the steelmaking raw material .IO62-CNI=SI that have already lost almost 30 percent this year in an amply supplied world market.

Sesa Sterlite’s total iron ore output from India, where it operates in Goa and neighbouring Karnataka, is expected to reach 9.29 million tonnes in the year to March 2015 from about 1.5 million a year ago, Aniruddha Joshi, a vice president at the firm, told Reuters in an interview on Thursday.

Most of the output will be exported as Indian steelmakers are not keen on buying the low-grade ore from Goa at global benchmark prices, Joshi said. The country is currently the world’s tenth largest exporter of iron ore.

“It’ll suffice to say that only China can use Goan ore,” Joshi said. “Because it’s hematite coarse fines which can be mixed with very fine concentrates that are only produced in China in high quantities.”

India’s Supreme Court in April lifted the ban in Goa that was aimed at curbing illegal mining, but ordered firms to renew mining leases and environmental clearances before restarting work. It also capped Goa’s annual output at 20 million tonnes.

Tom Albanese, chief executive of Vedanta Resources Plc that controls Sesa Sterlite, had earlier said its unit’s operations in Goa would restart around October.

Shares of Sesa Sterlite have surged more than 50 percent since the ban on mining in Goa was lifted.

CHINA DRIVEN

Goa rose to become India’s biggest iron ore exporter over the past decade after China’s insatiable steel mills started consuming even inferior grades, prompting many fly-by-night operators in the state to flourish with scant regard for rules.

For the rest of this article, click here: http://in.reuters.com/article/2014/07/03/sesa-sterlite-ironore-idINL4N0PE1PN20140703