The Coal Mines Nationalisation Act, 1973 was a major law through which the Government of India nationalised coal mines. It transferred ownership and control of most coal mines from private owners to the Central Government.
The Act is important because it created the foundation of India’s public-sector-dominated coal industry, later centred around Coal India Limited.
Background
Before nationalisation, many coal mines in India were privately owned.
The sector faced several problems:
- unscientific mining
- poor labour conditions
- unsafe working practices
- low investment in technology
- irregular coal supply
- overexploitation of mines
- weak conservation of coal resources
Coal was essential for railways, power generation, steel, cement and industrialisation. Therefore, the government considered coal too important to be left mainly to fragmented private control.
Coking coal mines were nationalised earlier through the Coking Coal Mines Nationalisation Act, 1972, because coking coal was crucial for the steel industry. The Coal Mines Nationalisation Act, 1973 extended nationalisation to non-coking coal mines.
Objective
The main objective of the Act was to ensure planned development of coal resources.
It aimed to:
- bring coal mining under public ownership
- improve scientific mining
- ensure coal conservation
- protect labour welfare
- provide regular coal supply to key sectors
- prevent private profiteering in a strategic resource
- support national industrial development
The idea was that coal should be developed as a national resource, not only as a private commercial commodity.
Key Provisions
The Act transferred the right, title and interest of coal mines to the Central Government.
After nationalisation, coal mining was largely reserved for the public sector.
Private participation was heavily restricted, except in limited cases allowed later for captive mining and other specified purposes.
The Act also provided for compensation to previous mine owners.
Over time, public sector entities became dominant in coal mining, especially Coal India Limited, which was formed in 1975 as a holding company for nationalised coal mines.
Significance
The Act was significant because it changed the structure of India’s coal sector.
Its importance lies in:
- creating public control over coal resources
- improving planned coal production
- supporting power and industrial sectors
- strengthening energy security
- improving labour regulation
- enabling coordinated coal-sector development
Nationalisation helped the government direct coal supply towards priority sectors such as electricity, railways, steel and heavy industry.
It also allowed the State to treat coal as a strategic input for economic planning.
Later Changes
Although the 1973 Act created a public-sector monopoly, later reforms gradually opened parts of the coal sector.
Important later developments include:
- captive coal mining for specified industries
- Coal Mines Special Provisions Act, 2015 after cancellation of coal block allocations
- commercial coal mining reforms
- private-sector participation through auctions
- MMDR and coal-sector amendments
- Coal Exchange Rules, 2026 for market-based coal trading
These reforms reduced the strict monopoly created by nationalisation and moved India towards a more competitive coal market.
Concerns
Nationalisation solved some problems but created new ones.
Public-sector dominance sometimes led to:
- limited competition
- production inefficiency
- bureaucratic delays
- quality complaints
- slow technological modernisation
- dependence on Coal India for most domestic supply
At the same time, coal mining continued to create serious environmental and social concerns such as land degradation, displacement, forest diversion, mine fires and pollution.
Conclusion
The Coal Mines Nationalisation Act, 1973 nationalised most coal mines in India and brought coal mining under Central Government control.
It was enacted to ensure scientific mining, coal conservation, regular supply and public control over a strategic resource.
Its legacy is the public-sector structure of India’s coal industry, especially the dominance of Coal India Limited, though later reforms have gradually opened the sector to private and commercial mining.



