1. At a Glance – PSU With a Power Complex
Here’s a Navratna PSU that digs lignite, burns it, sells power, and now wants to install solar panels on everything that doesn’t move. NLC India Ltd is sitting at a market cap of ₹36,011 Cr, CMP ₹260, and a P/E of 13.8 — almost half of the industry median P/E of 26+. ROE stands at 14.5%, ROCE at 10.5%, and debt-to-equity at 1.22.
In Q3 FY26 (December 2025 quarter), revenue came in at ₹4,443 Cr and PAT at ₹724 Cr with a healthy 30% operating margin. The stock has delivered 26.8% returns in one year and 47.9% in three years. Dividend yield? 1.39%. Not bad for a coal digger trying to cosplay as a renewable superhero.
But wait. Sales growth over five years is only 8.22%. Promoter holding has dropped from 79% to 72.2% due to a 7% OFS. Contingent liabilities stand at ₹13,859 Cr. And auditors have flagged land-related going-concern uncertainty in the latest board outcome.
So what is NLC India really?
A slow-burn PSU?
A renewable transition story?
Or a coal empire quietly expanding into 62 MTPA capacity?
Let’s open the mining helmet and take a look.
2. Introduction – From Lignite King to Renewable Intern
NLC India is not a startup. It’s not even young. It’s a full-grown government-backed fossil fuel machine.
It operates 3 lignite mines in Neyveli, 1 in Barsingsar, and a coal mine in Talabira, Odisha. It runs 3,640 MW of lignite-based thermal plants plus a 1,000 MW coal plant via a subsidiary.
And then suddenly someone in Delhi said, “Beta, renewables kar lo.”
Now NLC operates:
- 1,380 MW solar
- 51 MW wind
- First CPSE to cross 1 GW solar capacity
From digging black rock to installing solar panels in Andaman & Nicobar — what a character arc.
But here’s the twist:
Gross power generation declined from 25,022 MU in FY22 to 21,644 MU in FY24. Plant Load Factor dropped from 72%