Coal India has announced the retirement of Goutam Banerjee, executive director (HR), upon attaining the age of superannuation, bringing to a close a career that spanned more than three decades in the coal and mining sector.
Banerjee retired after serving in several senior HR leadership roles across Coal India and its subsidiary operations. In his role as executive director (HR), Banerjee played a key role in workforce management, industrial relations and human-resource strategy for one of India’s largest public- sector employers.
Before being elevated to executive director, he served as general manager (personnel, manpower planning and industrial relations) at Coal India. Earlier, he spent more than three decades with Eastern Coalfields (ECL), where he rose through the ranks and gained extensive experience across field, area and corporate-level HR functions.
During his tenure, Banerjee worked on a wide range of people-related initiatives, including employee relations, industrial relations, workforce planning, organisational development and talent management. At the corporate level, he also served as technical secretary to the director (personnel) and held a key position in the industrial relations hierarchy within the company.
His career coincided with significant changes in India’s mining sector, including efforts to modernise workforce practices, strengthen employee engagement and enhance organisational capability across large and geographically-dispersed operations.
Throughout his journey, Banerjee was associated with initiatives focused on employee welfare, leadership development and workforce effectiveness. His experience in industrial relations proved particularly valuable in managing complex workforce environments within the mining industry.
Banerjee began his professional career with Kesoram Refractories before moving to Durgapur Projects, a West Bengal government undertaking, and later joining Eastern Coalfields in 1994.
He holds a Postgraduate Diploma in Personnel Management from the Xavier Institute of Social Service and an honours degree in Economics.
His retirement marks the end of a long and distinguished career in public sector human resources leadership, leaving behind a legacy shaped by workforce development, employee relations and organisational stewardship across India’s coal industry.



