Monday, June 27, 2011

Status of Occupational Health in India

Mohit Gupta 's Blog
Jun, 25 '11 Subject: Occupational Health
This vicious circle of death and poverty epitomises the work situation of millions of workers in India.

Outbreak of New Occupational Illness


Mohit Gupta 's Blog
Jun, 25 '11 Subject: Occupational HealthPeople Training and Research Centre (PTRC) has been working in the field of Occupational Health for a Long Time. 

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Vedanta’s red mud pond leaks into Vamsadhara river

A crack in the western part of the red mud pond of Vedanta Alumina refinery has leaked into nearby water bodies and hence into the Vamsadhara river.



थर्मल पावर प्लांट के खिलाफ प्रदर्शन

आंध्र प्रदेश के काकारपल्ली इलाके में बनने जा रहे थर्मल पावर प्लांट का यहां के लोग विरोध कर रहे हैं। 15 अगस्त 2010 से लोग यहां क्रमिक अनशन पर बैठे हैं।


Read more at: http://www.ndtv.com/video/player/ndtv-special-ndtv-india/video-story/196277?cp

Question remains on CIL's expansion projects in Chhattisgarh


Coal India's expansion schemes are likely to take longer than expected in Chhattisgarh as the state has not submitted its plan as to how it will minimise environmental damage due to mining activities.
"...Korba will take longer because state has not submitted any remediation plan," according to a paper presented by the Ministry of Forest and Environment (MoEF) before Group of Ministers (GoM) on Coal said.

Monday, April 11, 2011

SC to seek expert opinion on Polavaram dam

J. Venkatesan

To ascertain whether it was being constructed in terms of the Godavari Tribunal Award
‘Orissa is agreeable for an independent expert being appointed to inspect the dam'

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Friday indicated that it would appoint an expert to inspect the Polavaram dam to ascertain whether it was being constructed in terms of the Godavari Tribunal Award.
A Bench of Justices Mukundakam Sharma and Anil R. Dave asked Additional Solicitor-General Harin P. Raval to take instructions on this proposal and inform the court on April 4.
The Bench was hearing an application filed by the Orissa Government in its suit seeking stay of operation of the approval granted by the Ministry of Environment and Forests to Polavaram project and for a direction to maintain status quo in its execution.
During the last hearing on March 3, the Bench had directed the parties to obtain instructions whether any expert or competent organisation could be associated with Central Water Commission to make an inspection of the dam in order to ascertain whether the construction of the dam is being carried out in terms of the award passed by the Godavari Tribunal.”
During the resumed hearing on Friday senior counsel for Orissa government, Raju Ramachandran submitted that Orissa was agreeable for an independent expert being appointed to inspect the dam. He gave three names—former Chairman of CWC, Anil D. Mohile; Prof. M. Perumal, IIT, Roorkee and Prof. A.K. Gosain, IIT, Delhi.
The ASG Mr. Raval opposed appointment of an expert stating that since CWC was a statutory body, there was no need for any outside expert as the question of institutional integrity was involved.
On behalf of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, senior counsel Rakesh Diwedi and Fali Nariman said the approved design for the dam should not be reopened in the name of inspection.
Senior counsel T.R. Andhyarujina for Maharashtra said the entire matter should be left to the CWC and there was no need for an outside expert to go into the issue.
Justice Sharma told Mr. Raval “it is only a question of ego. We are not de-meaning the CWC. We want another person to go and inspect the dam, what is wrong in it. Why should you object to it? Let the CWC submit its report and the expert submit his report, which may even fortify your opinion.”
When Mr. Raval sought time to take instructions, the Bench posted the matter for further hearing on April 4.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Jairam agrees to free more forest land for coal mining

Jairam agrees to free more forest land for coal mining

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh softened his stance at a meeting of the Group of Ministers (GoM) headed by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee today in an attempt to break the stalemate on the ‘go/no-go’ classification for coal mines in forest areas.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

State allows six iron ore mines to resume operations



Bhubaneswar: The Odisha government on Monday allowed six iron ore mines to resume operations after their operators submitted documents to show that their mining activities were legal.

The permission to operate was held up Friday for 23 iron ore mines in Joda area of the state's mineral rich Keonjhar district after the government found them operating without submitting required documents like forest clearance, mining lease, and surface rights.

Six of them submitted their documents. We allowed them to resume operation after the documents were found valid, Deputy Director (Mines) Umesh Chandra Jena said.

Operations at the remaining 17 mines will not be allowed until they submit their papers. They have been given seven days' time, he added.

It may be mentioned that the state is one of the largest mineral-bearing states with an estimated 16.92 percent of the country's mineral reserves.

The state government started an investigation in July 2009 following allegations that some mines were operating without licence.

The state government earlier this month had said it is likely to seek a ban on the export of iron ore and chrome ore from the state to meet domestic demand and prevent illegal mining.

The steel and mines department has already drafted a proposal and placed it before finance minister Prafulla Chandra Ghadei and chief minister Naveen Patnaik for approval.

Once it is approved, the government will send a formal proposal to the Centre, a senior official of the state steel and mines department said.

The state has approximately 600 mines and more than half of them have been closed since the past one year after the government tightened rules to prevent illegal mining.

New Year heralds new beginnings at Ramesh’s ministry

New Year heralds new beginnings at Ramesh’s ministry

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Mining expansion threatens indigenous tribes in Philippines

The EU is working to help the indigenous people on the Philippine island Mindoro protect their homeland from mining companies searching for natural resources. Locals have threatened suicide if their lands are taken.

25.01.2011

Mining expansion threatens indigenous tribes in Philippines

The EU is working to help the indigenous people on the Philippine island Mindoro protect their homeland from mining companies searching for natural resources. Locals have threatened suicide if their lands are taken.
Remote tribes in the Philippines are living in fear of losing their land and their traditional way of life due to an influx of mining companies to the region where they live.

Hungry for nickel, oil and gas, international mining firms have begun moving into ancient indigenous land on Mindoro, a tropical island in the western Philippines that is rich with untapped mineral resources. 

"If we will allow this mining to happen, maybe the day will come that the people will have no more land to till, no more rice to eat," said Eleanor Fajardo, a local mayor who is opposed to the mining activity. "I worry for the welfare of the people and our environment."

She added that dozens of applications for exploration work on Mindoro have already been filed by Canadian, Chinese and Australian firms.

Mindoro was first inhabited by the Mangyans, a collective name for eight different ethnic groups who today number over 24,000. Their small villages are dotted across the lush, untouched hills that rise high above the bustling little market towns that hug the island's coastline.

The burgeoning conflict has become so grave that the European Commission is now supporting efforts to equip the tribes with the legal weapon they need by helping them gain formal ownership of this land.

Miners waiting in the wings

In villages accessible only by narrow tracks through thick tropical vegetation, most Mangyan communities have never had contact with outsiders. In rainy seasons, high river water can block access and transform the paths into a muddy toboggan.

But it's the squeals of dozens of children playing with bamboo sticks that greet the handful of visitors able to reach a village of the Tao-buid tribe.

"Many families have over five children and there are young mothers as young as 12," said Marielou Realubit from Plan, an NGO that is working with the Mangyan communities.

Like other Mangyans, the Tao-buid live in reed and bamboo without access to clean water or electricity. They speak their own dialect and survive on subsistence farming.

A meeting of several tribes has been called to address the mining problem. Participants sit huddled on benches under a thatched roof and there is clapping as Fernando, a vocal tribal leader, stands in front of the crowd.

Legal rights

"We need to get the legal right to this land that we've lived on for generations," he said. "That's the only way we can fight the mining companies."

One of the tribal leaders from another village also rejected the mining businesses.

"Mining is neither part of our culture nor of our way of life," he said. "We've been here for generations. Our ancestors did not give us this land so it could be mined. We would rather take our own lives than give up the way we live."

There is no threat or anger as this "gurangon," or tribal elder, says he would rather commit suicide than give up his land, merely resignation. Alarmed at this encroachment on their ancestral homeland, some tribes have formed human barricades to keep the miners out.

To them, even the sight of foreigners is seen as a huge intrusion. The threat of them blowing up the sites where their ancestors are buried is, they say, too great even to contemplate.

Water buffalo graze in a clearing a short distance away from the leaders' meeting and several holes are visible in the ground.

"This is where they placed the explosives, deep underground, and you can still see the white residue around the edges," a local said. "These holes crisscross all the hills here, each line has a number. They are trying to test the flow of gas and oil."

A restraining order was placed on Pitkin Petroleum, which locals said carried ou the initial exploration, following protests by the Mangyans. But the order has now lapsed and Pitkin is believed to have contracted Chinese partners to carry out the mining.

"I grow the food for my family here and if the mining goes ahead, it will cut through my land," said Roberto, a farmer with two children.

Bribery allegations

Roberto said he believes tribal leaders consented to the exploration after receiving bribes from Pitkin.

"Our tribal leader initially did not allow this company access," he said. "But then he changed his mind because Pitkin offered him 60,000 pesos (1,000 euros) to get his consent. That's an enormous amount of money to us."

Mangyans earn around 30 eurocents a day, according to Plan.

Pitkin's press department has so far not responded to Deutsche Welle's request for an interview to answer these allegations.

Large-scale mining is banned on Mindoro but small-scale mining, though not so visible, is often far worse for the environment, said Nick Taylor, the head of development for the EU Commission in Manila.

"It's far worse," he said. "It's less regulated and the areas tend to be completely unusable afterwards."

Taylor said he is pessimistic about the hopes of keeping mining at bay.

"If you look at the Philippines geographically, it's close to China, which has a huge appetite for resources," he said. "Usually that kind of situation makes mining inevitable."

He added that the EU is now funding Plan to help Mangyans get the access to their indigenous tribal domain.

"Land is key for any indigenous peoples and getting this legal right is a very complicated process," Taylor said.

The government in Manila has to balance its economic development and the interests of the indigenous groups it has pledged to protect. But many believe that economic imperatives will win the day.

"We are a developing country and I don't think we can expect the support of our government," Fajardo said. "That's why we need to tap foreign countries and the EU for help. In the two years I think a lot of influential people will come here to us make us say 'yes' to this mining."

Author: Vanessa Mock, Mindoro, Philippines
Editor: Sean Sinico

© Deutsche Welle

Saturday, January 15, 2011

To flow or not to flow | India Environment Portal

To flow or not to flow | India Environment Portal
 “Most eias have picked up secondary data. No direct study, just a copy and paste job. In effect, there has been no impact assessment,”

The eia of Pala Maneri mentions names of villagers who participated in the public hearing. “Of those, two people were already dead. This shows how credible the hearing was,” 


said R Sreedhar of Environics Trust, New Delhi