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  • 8/13/2019 Digging Up the Dirt - The Hindu

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    Opinion Lead

    Published: October 21, 2013 01:46 IST | Updated: October 21, 2013 01:47 IST

    Digging up the dirt

    Madhav Gadgil

    ining companies have received favourable impact assessments even as they do great damage to the environment because regulatorsare willing to look the other way

    Last week,world leaders concerned about economic development got together at the International Monetary Fund,andgave a series of most instructive interviews. Our Finance Minister, P. Chidambaram, said that his problem wasthe slowing down of Indias economic growth and reduction in government revenues. The Deputy Prime Minister ofTurkey, though, struck a different note. He emphasised that the quality of economic growth was a very significantissue, and that the growth must be environmentally and socially sustainable.

    Goa project

    Recent developments in the context of mining in Goa have reinforced questions as to whether India is on a path ofsocially and environmentally sustainable development, and if the fundamental rights of our citizens, including theright to livelihood, are being respected. This is brought out by Justice Shah Commissions Report stating that noinspection was carried out of iron ore mines... resulting into fear-free environment which has caused loss to theecology, environment, agriculture, ground water, natural streams, ponds, rivers, biodiversity, etc. The fear-freeenvironment that the report talks about is not one that is enjoyed by the people, but by the mining industry supported

    by all arms of the state. A striking example of this has been the attack on Nilesh Gaonkar, a tribal activist of Cauvremvillage, in May 2011.

    It was developments like these that prompted the government of Goa to ask me to oversee a project to assess thequality of the Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA), compliance with Environment Clearance (EC) conditions andthe adequacy of the Environmental Management Plans (EMP) with respect to mines in operation in Goa. These aretools in our armoury to ensure that none of our developmental interventions has unacceptably large or avoidablenegative impacts, that the most desirable alternatives are selected and the projects managed efficiently. Enjoying fullcooperation of the State governmental agencies, the mine management as well as the people, we had at our disposal acomplete set of EIA-EC-EMPs for 79 mines then in operation. The study was conducted in an open, transparent andparticipatory manner involving a wide range of stakeholders and extensive field visits.

    Regrettably, we find that the EIA-EC-EMP process is being implemented in a very restricted framework of the project

    proponents getting the legally mandated clearances as quickly and with as little effort or involvement of society atlarge, as possible. As a result, there are serious deficiencies in the EIAs with deliberate misrepresentations of factsrelating to vital issues such as water and biodiversity resources and livelihood support systems of local people inpractically every single exercise. For instance, the EIA for mines adjoining village Rivona claimed that agriculture ischaracterised by dependence on monsoons as irrigation facilities are available for only one per cent of the land. Whenthe community members disputed this and requested the Agriculture Department to independently verify the facts,

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    the latter reported that Rivona has extensive irrigated agriculture and horticulture with its own perennial irrigation

    systems based on over 30 natural springs, all of which would be affected by mining.

    Issues brushed aside

    Public hearings are a vital and legally mandatory component of the EIA process complementing the consultantsreport, as it is the local community who have deep knowledge of the local environment and a genuine concern for itspreservation. The people invariably raise important issues, but these are quite improperly brushed aside. Forinstance, the Kushavati Bachao Andolan pointed out in writing that the Hunantlo Dongar manganese mine nearColumba village lies on the bank of a major rivulet of river Kushavati; this important fact was still left out of the final

    EIA. To be effective, public hearings are required by law to be held at the project site. However, this is routinelyviolated and in 95 out of 96 cases, the hearings were held in district or taluka headquarters.

    What we experience are not isolated, but cumulative impacts. Thus, 100 trucks plying with ore from one mine may bequite acceptable, but when thousands of trucks from several mines start plying on the same roads, this can lead tohorrible traffic jams and accidents. Indeed this has been one of the bitterest complaints of the people of Goa. The EIAprocess has so far uniformly neglected cumulative impacts. Furthermore, the exercises are confined to the narrowlimits of the leases and immediate vicinity, and ignore pervasive impacts such as on rivers of Goa. Mining has now

    been suspended since June 2012 as a consequence of the Justice Shah Commission reporting large-scale irregularitiesamounting to Rs.35,000 crore. With this withdrawal of mining impacts, the fisheries as well as shell-fisheries of therivers have registered a remarkable recovery with the waters becoming clearer and the bottom dwelling organismsfreed of sediment settling on them. Simultaneously, the estuarine brackish water land bunds are no longer suffering

    breakages as no waves are being created by large ore barges plying in the rivers. Not a single EIA has considered

    many such significant, widespread impacts. In consequence, as the Shah Commission emphasised, there has beensubstantial damage to the environment of the State as a whole and its ecological assets far beyond the mining area.

    Again, as the Shah Commission has highlighted, there has been no inspection and hence no monitoring ofmanagement of the mines. This has meant little serious efforts at mitigation of adverse impacts. To the contrary,there are examples of deliberate neglect. Thus a deep mine near Pissurlem village has punctured the aquifer anddrained away all ground water with the resultant serious loss of agricultural productivity. Yet, the water beingcollected in the mine pit is being pumped out and deliberately let out to the river through a long pipeline despitefarmers pleading that it be made available for irrigating their dried-up farms.

    What is clearly needed is to inject into the system ways of ensuring that justice is done to the larger social objectivesthat the EIA-EC-EMP process has been designed to serve. This calls for ensuring transparency, accountability andeffective social participation. Our democracy has ensured that there are excellent provisions for bringing this about,

    provisions such as the 73rd and 74th amendments to the Constitution that assign a significant role to local self-governments in the planning and implementation of developmental activities and the management of naturalresources within their jurisdiction, and the Biological Diversity Act that assigns a significant role to local self-governments in the documentation and management of the biodiversity resources within their jurisdiction.

    Nowhere in the world have governments taken steps on their own to protect the environment until public pressure hasforced them to do so. This is easier in egalitarian societies such as Japan or the Scandinavian countries, but moredifficult in countries with stratified societies such as India. But we do have a vibrant democracy and it is a mostpositive sign that the government of Goa asked us to objectively assess the situation and the Goan government, themining industry and the people all extended their full cooperation. Our report, the first such comprehensive study ofthe process in India, and as far as I know, anywhere in the world, would hopefully serve to better inform people, who

    will then pressure the government to take effective steps in the direction of the public good. I, for one, remainoptimistic.

    (Madhav Gadgil was on the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel)

    Keywords: Mining in Goa, Mining companies, Mining impact assessments, Enviromental regulators, EnvironmentalImpact Assessments, Environment Clearance, Justice Shah Commissions Report, Nilesh Gaonkar, EnvironmentalManagement Plans

    Printable version | Oct 21, 2013 11:54:31 AM | http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/digging-up-the-dirt/article5254622.ece

    The Hindu