Raising finance: Sino-Sindh Resources gets investment to develop Thar

Company to develop coal mine, 1,200MW power plant on the leased block.


Our Correspondent August 28, 2013
Capital expenditure: $2.6b is the total estimated cost of the project. PHOTO: File

KARACHI:


Sino-Sindh Resources (SSRL) executed a subscription and cooperation agreement with a consortium of investors consisting of Global Mining (China) Limited (GMC) and Asiapak Investments (Asiapak).


According to a press statement issued on Wednesday, SSRL has plans to develop 10 million tons per annum coal mine and integrated 1,200 MW mine-mouth power plant in Block 1 of Thar coalfields. The total project cost is estimated at $2.6 billion for which a bankable feasibility has been completed through China Coal Technology and Engineering Group (CCTEG).

SSRL holds a 30-year mining lease for Block 1 of Thar coalfields which covers approximately 150 square kilometres (km). SSRL was awarded the block after an intensive round of international competitive bidding in September 2011. The block holds lignite coal resources of approximately 3.5 billion tons including 600 million tons of measured, 1.9 billion tons of indicated and 1.0 billion tons of inferred resources. These resources are eminently suitable for power generation and have been proven by several reputable international companies including RWE of Germany and CCTEG of China.



Under the terms of the agreement, GMC will provide the equity funding for the project and will also arrange the required debt facilities from a consortium of Chinese banks. GMC will also assist SSRL in its ongoing process of negotiating an engineering procurement and construction (EPC) contract with a state-owned EPC contractor in China. GMC will also take a majority representation in the board of directors of SSRL and will appoint its chief executive officer.

GMC Chairman and major shareholder Hokming Tsueng said, “Thar holds one of the world’s largest reserves of lignite coal and if properly implemented holds the key to Pakistan’s energy security. We are excited at the opportunity to invest and are delighted to form a partnership with Asiapak Investments and SSRL’s existing management to develop Block 1 on a fast-track basis. The Government of Pakistan and of Sindh province appear to be very committed to the success of the projects in Thar. We have received strong cooperation from them so far and are confident that SSRL with our investment support will be an important part of the solution to Pakistan’s energy shortage.”

Published in The Express Tribune, August 29th, 2013.

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COMMENTS (4)

Danial Tauhidi | 10 years ago | Reply

@Asad Khan: its not necessary that the inferred values are always higher than the indicated one. usually for open fields the inferred values are higher like if we talk about whole Thar field. But in this case it is about a single block and has a limited boundary where the drilling pattern might be close. The drilling density and pattern decides the measured, indicated and inferred quantities. If we drill the whole block with close-spaced drills (<=500m for JORC code and <=400 for USGS) the resource estimated for whole block would be measured then, with zero indicated and inferred resource. If it is centered to close drill (measured) and then a wide-spaced drill follows it would be indicated. And suppose if a small part in that block is left without drill or too-widely-spaced drills that will be inferred and will be lesser compared to indicated. The same might be the case here !

Regards, DT Geologist

unbelievable | 10 years ago | Reply

Mine mouth power plant is probably the mopst practical alternative for the Thar surface coal - the coal quality is so poor that it takes more energy to transport it than it can economically produce. The real question is who is going to buy the electricity and at what price - that will drive the economics of the entire project and until that's resolved this project will go nowhere.

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