Amrapali & Chandragupta Area

Amrapali & Chandragupta Area is one of the operational areas of the Central Coalfields Limited located in the Tandwa CD block of the Chatra district and the Keredari CD block in the Hazaribagh district in the state of Jharkhand, India.[1]

Amrapali & Chandragupta Area
Location
Amrapali & Chadragupta Area is located in Jharkhand
Amrapali & Chadragupta Area
Amrapali & Chadragupta Area
Location in Jharkhand
Amrapali & Chadragupta Area is located in India
Amrapali & Chadragupta Area
Amrapali & Chadragupta Area
Amrapali & Chadragupta Area (India)
LocationNorth Karanpura Coalfield
Coordinates23°53′39″N 85°00′02″E / 23.8941°N 85.0005°E / 23.8941; 85.0005
Owner
CompanyCentral Coalfields Limited
Websitecentralcoalfields.in/cmpny/hstry.php

Overview edit

North Karanpura Coalfield has reserves of 14 billion tonnes of coal (proved, indicated and inferred), around 9% of India's total coal reserves, placing it among the biggest coalfields in India. Only a small corner of this coalfield was exploited earlier.[2]

Future mega projects in the area include: Magadh opencast project expansion with nominal capacity of 51 million tonnes per year and peak capacity of 70 million tonnes per year, Amrapali OCP expansion with nominal capacity 25 MTY and peak capacity of 35 MTY, Sanghamitra OCP with nominal capacity of 20 MTY and peak capacity of 27 MTY, and Chandragupta OCP with nominal capacity of 15 MTY and peak capacity of 20 MTY.[3][4]

Mining activity edit

 
 
 
8km
5miles
 
Chandragupta
mine site
O
Sanghamitra
mine site
O
Gerua
River
Damodar
River
Bachra
CT
Tandwa
R
Tetariakhar mine
O
Amrapali mine
O
Magadh mine
O
CCL Piparwar Area Office
A
Ray Bachra mine
U
Piparwar
Mangardaha mine
U
Ashoka mine
O
Piparwar mine
O
Collieries in the North Karanpura Coalfield except the North Karanpura Area
U: Underground colliery, O: Open Cast colliery, A: Administrative headquarters, CT: census town, R: rural/urban centre
Location of new mine sites are approximate
Owing to space constraints in the small map, the actual locations in a larger map may vary slightly
 
 
 
15km
10miles
 
B
I
H
A
R
Mohana
River
Damodar
River
Bokaro
River
Konar
River
Barsoti River
Barakar River
CCL
Hazaribagh Area
CCL Argada Area
CCL Barka
Sayal Area
CCL Amrapali
& Chandragupta Area
Surajkund hot spring
HS
Konar
Dam
D
Hazaribagh
Wildlife Sanctuary
T
Urimari
CT
Religara
CT
Meru
CT
Konra
CT
Gidi
CTV
Dari
CT
Cherra
CT
Chauparan
CT
Charhi
CT
Bishnugarh
CT
Barhi
CT
Hazaribagh
M
Tati Jhariya
R
Padma
R
Nagar Barsot
R
Khapriaon
R
Keredari
R
Katkamsandi
R
Katkamdag
R
Ichak
R
Gorhar
R
Daru
R
Churchu
R
Chalkusha
R
Barkatha
R
Barkagaon
R
Cities, towns and locations in Hazaribagh district in North Chotanagpur Division
Some census towns and locations around Hazaribagh city have been shown in the Hazaribagh City map
M: municipality, CT: census town, R: rural/ urban centre, T: tourist centre, D: dam, HS: hot spring
Owing to space constraints in the small map, the actual locations in a larger map may vary slightly

Mines and projects edit

Amrapali open cast project in the North Karanpura Coalfield is located in the Chatra district and supplies coal to Barh Super Thermal Power Station. It has an annual rated capacity of 12 million tonnes per year. With a mineable reserve of 124.79 million tonnes, it has a life of 11 years, as on 31 March 2018. It operates in two geological blocks: Amrapali and Krishnapur. An 80 km metalled road connecting Tandwa with Hazaribagh, via Simaria passes through the area.[5]

As of 2020, as per a newspaper report, Central Coalfields Limited has initiated steps for acquisition of 3331.50 acres of land in 7 villages (6 in Keredari CD block in Hazaribagh district and 1 in Tandwa CD block in Chatra district) for the Chandragupta open cast project. The announcement is being made in the villages with the beating of drums. Quoting company officials, the report says that the area has reserves of 600 million tonnes of coal, and annual production target is 20 million tonnes.[6]

Land acquisition edit

Coal India acquires land for coal mining under the Coal Bearing Areas (Acquisition and Development) Act 1957 (CBA Act in short). A declaration of intention to acquire land in the government gazette is enough. There is no requirement of consultation with the affected communities. An affected person can file an objection with the office of the Coal Controller, under the Ministry of Coal, within 30 days of the notice of acquisition. The Coal Controller makes a recommendation to the central government about it.[7]

Medical facilities edit

In the North Karanpura Coalfield, CCL has the following facilities:

Central Hospital at Dakra with 50 beds has 11 general duty medical officers and 1 specialist. Among the facilities are: X‐Ray, ECG, Semi auto analyzer, monitor defibrillator, dental chair. It has 2 ambulances.[8]

Piparwar Hospital at Bachra with 11 beds has 6 general duty medical officers and 1 specialist. Among the facilities it has are: cardiac monitor, suction machine, X-Ray machine and ECG. It has 4 ambulances.[8]

There are central facilities in the Central Hospital, Gandhinagar at Kanke Road, Ranchi with 250 beds and in the Central Hospital, Naisarai at Ramgarh with 150 beds.[8]

There are dispensaries at Rohini, KDH, Purnadih/ Karkatta in North Karanapura Area, at Amrapali Project, Magadh Project in the Magadh Sanghamitra Area, at Tetariakhad in the Rajhara Area.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ "Central Coalfields Limited". Areas – Amrapali & Chandragupta. CCL. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  2. ^ "The North Karanpura Coalfields". Jharkhand. sinclair-environmental. Archived from the original on 16 May 2015. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Mega projects". Central Coalfields Limited. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  4. ^ "The Extent of Existing and New Mining Projects". doc player. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  5. ^ "Pre-feasibility report of Amrapali OCO (12 MTPA)" (PDF). CCL. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  6. ^ "बहुप्रतीक्षित सीसीएल की चंद्रगुप्त कोल माइंस केरेडारी प्रखंड में खुलने की तैयारी में (Preparations on for opening of the much-awaited Chandragupta Coal Mines in Keredari Block)". in Hindi. livehindustan.com, 5 September 2020. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  7. ^ "When Land is Lost, Do We Eat Coal, Coal Mining and Violation of Adivasi Rights in India" (PDF). 6. Land Acquisition: Coal Bearing Areas Act 1957. Amnesty International. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  8. ^ a b c "Status report of existing patient care facility in CCL" (PDF). CCL. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  9. ^ "Status of Dispensaries" (PDF). CCL. Retrieved 19 January 2021.