Kishan Reddy Reaffirms Modi Govt's Commitment to SCCL Workers
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Coal and Mines Minister G. Kishan Reddy attended a workers' rally of Singareni Collieries Company Ltd (SCCL) at Kothagudem Club, Telangana, on 13 July 2026, as part of the 'Singareni Bharosa Yatra' (Singareni Assurance Tour), reaffirming the Modi government's commitment to strengthening the coal company and ensuring worker welfare.
Context
Addressing a large gathering of Singareni workers, Kishan Reddy said the venue reverberated with chants of 'Jai Singareni, Jai Telangana' ('Long live Singareni, Long live Telangana'). He described the warmth and enthusiasm shown by the workers as deeply gratifying and used the platform to renew the central government's pledge to the coal mining workforce of the Godavari valley.
The minister highlighted the allocation of the Tadicherla-II coal block to SCCL as the centrepiece of the government's commitment. He stated that this block — sought by workers for nearly 20 years — was allocated directly by Prime Minister Narendra Modi without an auction, the only such direct allocation in the country in approximately 11 years.
Policy Backdrop
The policy context for this allocation is significant. Following the coal block irregularities of the Congress-era, which Kishan Reddy characterised as a Rs 2.60 lakh crore coal scam, the Supreme Court of India in 2014 cancelled a large number of coal block allocations made between 1993 and 2010 and mandated that all future allocations be made exclusively through a transparent auction process.
Since then, coal blocks across India have been distributed via competitive e-auctions under the Coal Mines (Special Provisions) Act. The direct allocation of Tadicherla-II to SCCL — a joint venture between the Government of India and the Government of Telangana — represents a rare departure from this norm, justified by the Centre on the grounds of Telangana's special circumstances and SCCL's legacy status as a state-run mining entity.
The minister stated that the allocation would secure coal production for the next 40 to 50 years, providing long-term certainty for SCCL's operations and the livelihoods of its workforce.
Stakeholders and Impact
SCCL is one of India's most significant public-sector coal producers, operating primarily in the Godavari valley coalfields of Telangana and supplying coal for the state's power and industrial requirements. The company's workforce has historically been a politically influential constituency in the region.
The 'Singareni Bharosa Yatra' is framed as an outreach effort to reassure SCCL workers of continued central support. For Kishan Reddy, who is simultaneously the BJP's Telangana state president, the event carries both administrative and political significance — demonstrating the party's engagement with the organised labour base in the coal belt ahead of future electoral cycles.
The direct allocation of Tadicherla-II is expected to sustain employment in the Kothagudem coal belt districts, where SCCL operations form the backbone of the local economy.
What's Next
The development timeline and production ramp-up at Tadicherla-II will be closely watched over the coming years. Any further direct allocations or policy relaxations for SCCL in upcoming coal ministry reviews will serve as a barometer of the Centre's long-term approach to state-run mining entities.
With domestic coal output expansion and import substitution remaining central to India's energy strategy, the Tadicherla-II allocation signals that legacy public-sector miners in coal-rich states may continue to receive preferential treatment under carefully defined conditions, even within the post-2014 auction framework.