<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><root available-locales="en_US," default-locale="en_US"><static-content language-id="en_US"><![CDATA[<p>State-backed Coal India may have to pay power companies between 10 and 40 per cent of the average cost of 20 per cent and more shortfall in supplies under new guaranteed fuel pacts the government is forcing it to sign, ministry sources said.<br><br>The world's biggest coal miner, however, stands to gain equal levels of rewards even if it meets only 90 per cent of its commitments under these pacts with power plants that are due to be commissioned by 2015 and generate 50,000 megawatts of power.<br><br>Coal India's production has stagnated due to regulatory and infrastructure hurdles. In 2011-12, it missed even a scaled down output target, producing about 436 million tonnes. It now aims to produce 470 million tonnes in 2012-13.<br><br>The under-performance by the coal monopoly has worried Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, already struggling with a slowing economy, and he is now pushing the company to boost output which could help many power plants that are running below capacity.<br><br>"What is being proposed is if the company fails to provide less than 80 per cent then it will be penalised in a graded manner," said a senior source in the coal ministry on condition of anonymity as the proposals are still being finalised.<br><br>"Between 75 and 80 per cent supply (of the contracted amount), it will be fined 10 per cent of the average cost of the shortfall. For 70-75 per cent of supply the penalty will be 20 per cent and below 70 per cent supply will attract a 40 percent penalty."<br><br>Average domestic coal prices are Rs 1,600-1,700 per tonne and are anywhere between 40-70 per cent below international spot prices as they are capped by the government which is keen to provide cheap electricity.<br><br>Indonesia spot coal prices -- the biggest source for India's imports -- are currently around $65 per tonne.<br><br>Singh's decision to force Coal India to sign guaranteed fuel supply pacts followed intensive lobbying by top executives from India's power companies, who had sought his help to boost supplies of coal. Singh's office has said Coal India will have to ensure supplies, including by imports if needed.<br><br>Coal India has also said it needs more clarity on who will foot the bill for any imports before it commits to major purchases needed to meet supply obligations to power producers.<br><br>India's coal demand is set to jump to 981 million tonnes by 2017, official data shows, but output in this period may only be at 715 million tonnes, leaving imports to bridge the gap.<br><br>Coal accounts for about half of India's power generation.<br><br>Last month, a government auditor's draft report said India lost up to $210 billion in revenue by selling coal deposits too cheaply, in another headache for Singh's government which has spent almost all of its second term fighting graft allegations.<br><br>(Reuters)</p>