Average Sale Price for Low
Grade Iron Ore Notified
·
Notification Date: 10 April 2026
·
Rule Amended: Minerals (Other than Atomic and Hydro Carbons Energy Minerals) Concession
(Third Amendment) Rules, 2026
·
Objective: Establish methodology for publishing Average Sale Price (ASP) of Haematite
Iron Ore below threshold value (45% Fe), including BHQ and BHJ.
ASP Calculation Methodology
·
35% to <45% Fe grade: ASP = 75% of ASP of 45%–<51% Fe grade.
·
<35% Fe grade: ASP = 50% of ASP of 45%–<51% Fe grade.
Context & Rationale
·
Threshold Value: Haematitic Iron Ore = 45% Fe (Min.).
·
Problem Earlier: ASP of higher grade (45%–<51% Fe) applied to below-threshold ores, making
beneficiation uneconomical.
·
Solution: New methodology ensures fair valuation, enabling economic beneficiation
of BHQ/BHJ and other low-grade ores.
Implications
·
Resource Utilization: Brings low-grade ores into usable category.
·
Mineral Conservation: Promotes scientific and optimal mining.
·
Steel Industry: Ensures steady supply of feed-grade ore.
·
Self-Sufficiency: Supports India’s continued independence in iron ore availability.
Additional Clarification
·
Run-of-Mine (ROM): Royalty chargeable on lumps and fines after initial screening.
·
Safeguard: Economic value of mineral cannot be lowered artificially through processing
of ROM.
[ABS News Service/14.04.2026]
The Ministry of Mines has notified the
Minerals (Other than Atomic and
Hydro Carbons Energy Minerals) Concession (Third Amendment) Rules, 2026 on 10th April, 2026 providing
the methodology for publication of average sale price (ASP) of Haematite Iron Ore
below the threshold value, including for Banded Haematite Quartzite (BHQ) and Banded
Haematite Jasper (BHJ).
The threshold value of a mineral is the
limit below which the material obtained after mining can be discarded as waste.
The notified threshold value for Haematitic Iron Ore is 45% Fe (Min.). There are
huge quantities of iron ore below the threshold value in the country and some of
which is in the form of BHQ or BHJ, which are the principal host rocks of iron ore.
With the improvement in technology for processing and beneficiation, the iron ore
resources of below threshold value, including the BHQ and BHJ, have become amenable
to beneficiation to generate high grade iron ore which can be used as feed grade
ore for steel making. In order to facilitate the beneficiation of such low-grade
iron ore, a suitable policy was required to be provided.
Before the present amendment in the rules,
there was no methodology to publish ASP of Haematite Iron Ore having Fe content
below threshold value (i.e., below 45% Fe) including for BHQ and BHJ. Thus, the
ASP published for lowest grade of Haematitic Iron above the threshold value, i.e.,
45% to below 51% Fe grade, was taken as the ASP for these grades. Use of ASP of
higher grade for levying royalty, auction premium, etc. on the grade below threshold
value made the beneficiation of such minerals uneconomical. The present amendment
in the rules addresses this issue. Thus, the amended rule provides that the ASP
of Haematite Iron Ore having Fe content below the threshold value will be calculated
as follows:
(a) for
35% to below 45% Fe grade, the average sale price shall be equal to seventy-five
per cent. of average sale price of 45% to below 51% Fe grade of Iron Ore;
(b) for
below 35% Fe grade, the average sale price shall be equal to fifty per cent. of
average sale price of 45% to below 51% Fe grade of Iron Ore.
Bringing low-grade resources into the
usable category will address the concern of depletion of high-grade iron ore resources
and will lead to a steady supply of mineral to the steel industry. Utilization of
low-grade iron ore resources will be in the interest of mineral conservation as
well as promote scientific and optimal mining of iron ore resources. As a result,
the country will continue to be self-sufficient in iron ore.
The amendment in the rules also clarified
that in case the processing of run-of-mine results in decrease in its economic value,
then royalty shall be chargeable on the lumps and fines after initial screening
of unprocessed run-of-mine. The term run-of-mine refers to raw unprocessed or uncrushed
material in its natural state obtained after blasting or digging, from the mineralised
zone of a lease area. Raw unprocessed minerals are required to be processed to increase
the concentration of the target mineral, remove impurities, and transform the material
into a form that industries can actually use. The present amendment in the rules
clarifies that economic value of mineral cannot be lowered in the name of processing
of run-of-mine.