Kishan Reddy: Modi Govt Allocates Tadicherla-II Block to SCCL
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Coal and Mines Minister G. Kishan Reddy announced on Monday, 13 July 2026 that the Tadicherla-II coal block has been allocated directly to Singareni Collieries Company Ltd (SCCL) by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led government, fulfilling a demand that workers, local residents, elected representatives, and political parties across Telangana had pressed for nearly two decades.
Context
Posting from the Singareni region itself, Kishan Reddy said — in Telugu — 'సింగరేణి గడ్డపై నుంచి గర్వంగా చెబుతున్నాను' ('I say this proudly from the soil of Singareni'). He described Tadicherla-II as the only coal block directly allocated to SCCL in approximately eleven years, without any auction process. The minister attributed the decision to the central government's 'affection for Telangana' and its focus on securing SCCL's future.
SCCL, headquartered in Kothagudem and operating across the Godavari coalfields of Telangana, is jointly owned by the Telangana state government and the Union government. It is one of the largest employers in the region and a critical supplier of thermal coal to power stations across southern India.
Policy Backdrop
The significance of a direct allocation lies in the policy shift that followed a landmark 2014 Supreme Court ruling, which cancelled 204 coal block allocations made since 1993 on grounds of arbitrariness, mandating transparent auction mechanisms going forward. The Coal Mines (Special Provisions) Act, 2015 institutionalised competitive auctions for most blocks while retaining a limited window for direct allotments to government companies under specific criteria.
Since that reform, direct grants to state public sector undertakings have been rare. SCCL has historically secured blocks through bilateral central-state arrangements rather than open bidding — a reflection of the federal tensions inherent in coal resource governance. The Tadicherla-II block, located in Bhadradri Kothagudem district, had remained unallocated through successive auction cycles, making its direct grant a notable departure from the prevailing norm.
Stakeholders and Impact
SCCL employs tens of thousands of workers directly and supports a large ancillary workforce across the Telangana coal belt. For these workers and surrounding communities, a new block allocation signals potential expansion of operations, additional employment, and extended mine life for the company. Local elected representatives and trade unions had consistently flagged the absence of fresh block allocations as a threat to SCCL's long-term viability.
The allocation also carries political weight in Telangana, where SCCL's fortunes are closely watched ahead of state-level political cycles. Kishan Reddy, who serves simultaneously as BJP Telangana state president, framed the decision as evidence of the central government's commitment to the state's industrial workforce.
What's Next
The immediate focus will be on the formal notification of the allotment and the timeline for commencement of mining operations at Tadicherla-II. Parliamentary scrutiny of the direct-allotment route — and whether further blocks may be granted to SCCL or other state PSUs under the same mechanism — is likely to follow. The performance metrics and revenue-sharing terms attached to the block will be key indicators of whether this allocation sets a precedent for federal coal resource sharing in the post-auction era.