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Singrauli is a district in the eastern part of the state of Madhya Pradesh, India. It lies in the Rewa division and is known nationally as one of India's principal energy hubs, owing to its substantial coal reserves and concentration of thermal power generation capacity. The district shares its eastern boundary with the state of Uttar Pradesh and its southern boundary with Chhattisgarh.
| State | Madhya Pradesh |
|---|---|
| Division | Rewa |
| Headquarters | Waidhan |
| Formed | 2008 (carved out of Sidhi district) |
| Major town | Singrauli (NCL township area) |
| Region | Eastern Madhya Pradesh / Baghelkhand |
Singrauli district was created on 24 May 2008, when it was separated from Sidhi district to form an independent administrative unit. The district headquarters was established at Waidhan. The wider Singrauli region, which extends across the state border into Sonbhadra district of Uttar Pradesh, has long been recognised as a strategic mineral and energy belt.
The district is part of the Vindhyan plateau and Baghelkhand region. The Rihand reservoir (Govind Ballabh Pant Sagar), formed by the damming of the Rihand river, lies on the eastern fringe of the district and is one of the largest artificial lakes in India. The terrain is undulating, with mixed forest cover, and lies within the catchment of the Son river system.
Singrauli is divided into tehsils including Singrauli, Waidhan, Deosar, Chitrangi and Sarai. The district has three blocks at the development level and falls under the Singrauli Lok Sabha constituency arrangement that combines parts of neighbouring areas. Local urban governance is handled by the Singrauli Municipal Corporation, which covers the towns of Waidhan, Morwa and Baidhan.
Singrauli is often referred to as the "energy capital of India" due to the density of coal mining and power generation activity. Major institutions operating in the district include:
Apart from coal and power, the district has limited agricultural activity, with paddy, wheat and pulses cultivated in the rain-fed lowlands. Forest produce, including tendu leaves, also contributes to rural incomes.
The population includes a significant proportion of Scheduled Tribes, notably the Gond, Baiga and Kol communities, alongside other groups speaking Bagheli and Hindi. The displacement of tribal and rural households due to mining expansion and reservoir submergence has been a recurring social issue in the region.
The Singrauli–Sonbhadra industrial belt has been identified by the Central Pollution Control Board as one of India's critically polluted areas, owing to emissions from thermal plants and dust from open-cast mining. Several remediation and monitoring programmes have been undertaken in response.
Singrauli's coal reserves and clustered power plants supply electricity to a wide swathe of northern and central India through the national grid, making the district pivotal to India's base-load power generation. It is also a frequent reference point in Indian discussions on energy policy, environmental regulation, and tribal land rights.