NEW DELHI (India CSR)— In a significant move underscoring its commitment to technological advancement and sustainable energy, Coal India Limited (CIL), India’s largest coal producer, is set to invest approximately Rs. 1,900 crore in Research & Development (R&D) initiatives by 2030. This strategic investment aims to modernize coal operations, develop clean coal technologies, and support India’s energy transition while maintaining energy security.
Driving Innovation in the Coal Sector
CIL has already been ramping up its R&D efforts. Key highlights include:
- Centre of Excellence with IIT Hyderabad: In March 2025, CIL signed an MoU with IIT Hyderabad to establish the Centre of Clean Coal Energy and Net Zero (CLEANZ). CIL committed ₹98 crore over five years for this initiative, focusing on clean coal technologies, carbon capture, enhanced coal bed methane recovery, AI/ML applications, and net-zero pathways using low-grade and rejected coal.
- National Centre for Coal and Energy Research (NaCCER): Located at CMPDI in Ranchi, NaCCER serves as a hub for cutting-edge research under CIL’s umbrella, coordinating projects on production efficiency, mine safety, environmental sustainability, and coal-to-chemicals.
- Ongoing Projects and Funding: CIL’s internal R&D budget has seen substantial increases, with annual provisions reaching ₹70–250 crore in recent years. Multiple projects are underway, including perovskite solar cells, paste fill technology, 5G communication in mines, AI-based safety systems, and CO2-to-methanol conversion. CIL’s R&D Board can sanction projects up to ₹50 crore individually.
This Rs. 1,900 crore plan builds on these foundations, likely encompassing expanded collaborations with premier institutions (IITs, CSIR labs), startups via hackathons, and indigenous technology development for coal gasification, beneficiation, and critical minerals.
Broader Context: ₹1 Trillion Capex and Diversification
The R&D push aligns with CIL’s ambitious Rs. 1 trillion capital expenditure (capex) roadmap through FY31. This includes:
- Investments in first-mile connectivity (Rs.25,000 crore).
- Coal gasification projects (e.g., ₹25,000 crore at Lakhanpur with BHEL, targeting production by FY30).
- Thermal power and renewable energy initiatives.
Government support complements this through the Ministry of Coal’s S&T scheme (with proposals for enhanced outlays till 2030–31) and a Rs.37,500 crore incentive scheme for coal gasification aiming for 100 million tonnes utilization by 2030.
Strategic Importance for India
India relies on coal for ~70-75% of its power generation. This investment will help:
- Improve efficiency and reduce emissions.
- Promote “waste-to-wealth” (e.g., coal mining waste utilization).
- Foster self-reliance in clean technologies and critical minerals.
- Create jobs and support Make in India through indigenization and startups.

Chairman-cum-Managing Director P.M. Prasad (or successor leadership) emphasized that such initiatives position CIL as a future-ready energy company balancing legacy strengths with green innovation.
Challenges and Outlook
While annual R&D spends by coal PSUs have hovered around Rs. 300 crore recently, scaling to Rs. 1,900 crore cumulatively signals strong momentum. Success will depend on effective execution, industry-academia partnerships, and policy support. This move not only strengthens CIL’s role in India’s energy landscape but also contributes meaningfully to national goals of energy security, sustainability, and technological sovereignty by 2030.
Sources: Official Ministry of Coal reports, PIB releases, Business Standard, and CIL announcements.
