http://amrc.org.hk/node/1271
India is endowed with huge resources of many metallic and non-metallic minerals. Since independence in 1947, there has been a rapid growth in the mineral production both in terms of quantity and value. Currently, India produces as many as 87 minerals, which include 4 fuel, 10 metallic, 47 non-metallic, 3 atomic and 23 minor minerals (including building and other materials).
The mining activities are extremely poorly regulated despite the fact that as early as 1948, the founding fathers of the constitution realized this need. During the Constitutional debates, they saidas early as in 1948, “Industrialisation has brought in its wake an ever-increasing demand for mineral resources. These resources are non-replenishable and mostly scarce. Proper control over regulation and development of mines and minerals is therefore, a matter of national concern.” Today over 80,000 mines operate illegally as against nearly 10,000 legitimate leases. Only a third of the legal mines actually report to the Indian Bureau of Mines, the regulator.
Within two decades of liberalised economy, much in contrast with the Constitutional objectives, mining as a sector has come to be associated with scams, conflicts, violence and ecological degradation.
A Quick Overview
Mining of major minerals was a forte of the Public Sector Undertakings until the nineties when the country embarked on the economic policy of privatization and globalization. New ways are being devised for exploitation of the resources and to hand over wealth of the nation for small short-term gains. The rapidity with which the global interests want to usurp these resources is reflected to the stock markets and it is with an exponential rate that mining is devouring lands and livelihoods of many communities. In the case of coal, the private sector was a key player until it was nationalized in the seventies again to be opened up in the last decade and as of today nearly twenty per cent of the known coal reserves of the country have been handed over to the private sector. Most mineral resources are co-terminus with Forests and Schedule Areas and mining has become a major source of destruction of the environment and livelihoods of the local communities and has reached alarming proportions. Some key facts:
The current trend is to promote more mining and a complex set of factors external as well as internal are driving more investments. India opened up its FDI in mining without any bottlenecks for the investors in 1991. The policies initially aided the State and later, the corporates, as promoter of economic growth and private profitability by rapidly abstracting mineral wealth of the country. Various actors have invested into the sector, including national and international companies, banks, equity funds, and also “round-tripping” of illegal funds etc. It is now predicted to almost doubling its current size within the next 15 years. The irony is while the mining is being promoted, there is no polluters pay principle in practice which is building a huge cost towards environment. The regulatory regime is in place but these are again skewed by executive decisions to promote investments. Moreover monitoring is not effective thus leading to lowest compliance.
Government of India’s Priority and Our Concerns
The National Mineral Policy of 2008 banks upon inviting high investments into the mining sector and has promised of a Sustainable Mining Framework. Although there has been mention about impact on people, land acquisition and compensation, it is hugely oriented at looking mining as an economic opportunity. This is reflected in the new bill, through which a single mining lease could be as large as 100 km2; renewal of leases is being replaced by extension bequeathing it till the deposit lasts which will make miners squat for long; there is a growing dilution of provisions which favours ownership to communities to only profit sharing that too through a highly bureaucratic setup.
The push is to change government policies and make them favourable to industry, thus the mining companies and the State are equally alienated from the host communities. The financial transactions are very opaque, with investments banks which are large in number channelizing funds which is difficult to track. The whole issue of capital mobility and its role in expanding mining is still poorly understood.
Ecosystems are getting disturbed beyond their resilience, like the river ecosystem is getting hugely affected, so is the wildlife corridors. The interrelationship between governance of a welfare state and mining is marred by huge gaps and strange complicated structures. The glaring anachronism in terms of neglect of mapping human, botanical, zoological and atmospheric resources is huge; the result of which is these overlying resources are not accounted and treated as overburden by companies and government. Thereby the whole process is damaging the huge potential of community and undermining the wealth of the ecosystem.
By and large in the mining operation and investment world, the key beneficiaries are investors, banks, owners, politicians and contractors, consultants and reclaimers. The cost is being paid by local communities, workers, environment, ecosystem and small investors.
The first Industrial Policy Resolution adopted in 1948 codified the national policy in respect of mines and minerals. Mining sector also received due attention in the second 'Industrial Policy Statement' issued in 1956. As a follow-up measure to Industrial Policy Resolution of 1956, the Mines Minerals Regulation and Development Act 1948 (MMRD) was repealed and MMRD Act 1957 was enacted. Under this Act the Mineral Concession Rules 1960 and the Mineral Conservation and Development Rules 1958 (MCDR) were issued. The new Industrial policy in 1991 oriented towards market liberalisation.
The National Mineral Policy 1993 was an exercise to keep the mineral sector tuned to the restructuring measures adopted in the trade and fiscal sectors. The new Mineral Policy declared in March 1993, has made a radical departure from the earlier policies by throwing open the mineral sector to private companies and by allowing equity participation by foreign companies in joint venture in mining promoted by Indian Companies. Further Amendments in MMRD Act, 1957 in 1999 was brought in to reflect the changed emphasis on “development” rather than “regulation” and was amended to MMDR Act.
The slow pace of Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) in the mining sector even five years after the liberalization of the investment regime, the lack of enthusiasm for investment in prospecting shown by the domestic private sector, and the lack of resources with public sector agencies meant that the sector was unable to significantly contribute to growth. During the Mid-term Appraisal of the 10th Plan in the Planning Commission, it was observed that the 1993 policy had not been able to achieve the aim of encouraging the flow of private investment and introduction of high end technology for exploration and mining because of procedural delays, etc. A need for review of NMP, 1993 with a High Level Committee on National Mineral to review the situation led to the National Mineral Policy (NMP), 2008, which confers lot more concessions to investors while also expressing the need for environmental and social safeguards. A new Bill, the Mines Minerals Development and Regulation Act 2011 has been introduced in the Parliament and is currently under the scrutiny of the Parliamentary Standing Committee.
The provisions regarding working conditions and workers are covered by the Mines Act 1951 which is also being reviewed. Surveys conducted in few selected mines recently by Directorate General of Mines Safety show that a significant number of persons employed in the mines are suffering from occupational diseases including Silicosis, Coal Workers’ Pneumoconiosis, Noise Induced Hearing Loss, etc. Because of the acute shortage of Occupational Health Inspectors, a complete picture of the occupational health status in mines is not available. Moreover, the persons employed in mines are exposed to number of hazards at workplace which adversely affect their health. Some of the important ones are dust, noise, vibrations, heat, humidity etc.
The long-term programmes in every sector of the economy in India are still governed by and large by the Plan Programmes. Occupational Safety and Health at workplaces has been declared a priority area for formulation of activities in the XII five year plan, the Planning Commission had set up a Working Group on Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) under the chairmanship of Secretary, Ministry of Labour and Employment. The report concludes on the existing situation “In spite of many initiatives, the standards of safety in mines have not yet reached to a worldwide accepted norm of Zero Harm at Workplace. Further, there are periodic occurrences of disasters in coal mines.
This calls for fresh initiatives with use of modern technologies and tools, scientific data acquisition, analysis and formulation of action plans on each identified thrust areas, proper implementation and effective monitoring of results. In the area of statutory enforcement, result based inspections and enquiries, compliance tracking system and on-line monitoring of processes are proposed to be undertaken through various plan schemes proposed during the XII Five Year Plan.
However all these so called measures being taken up as a priority will not be having much implications until the Mines Act is made more stringent and companies and government agencies are held accountable.
Towards a Way Ahead
Mining is one of the most environmentally and socially destructive economic activity. It has a low contribution to the GDP but the conflict it engenders is enormous and widespread. Our country today has the dubious distinction of having illegal mines significantly outnumbering the legal mines. A new Mines Mineral Development and Regulation Act is on the anvil and it calls for far reaching reforms in the mining sector. The future should usher in an era of Mineral Development with development as the focus rather than the current attitude of exploiting minerals for mere profit.
The key emphasis has to be on
There are very little resources going into developing new exploration methods. While our EEZ extends to 200 km from the coast, current investments are restricted only to search for oil and gas and disturbing the near shore environment.
A Reflection
We recognize that the minerals will be ours forever if we restrain mining but the wealth of the soil and other biota will be lost forever if we mine the minerals below them. Mechanisms like paying the Net Present Value as compensation do not reflect the true long term value of the ecosystem services which the terrain and the plant and animal resources provide. The future must make these important elements in the design.
These are issues that several organisations, networks and alliances be it mm&P in India, JATAM in Indonesia and AIMES in Africa, ATNC, ANREOV, JSAPMMD, NGO Forum on ADB, MAC and several other groups in Latin America are grappling with and confronting as realities. There are varied strong protests in the entire life-cycle where alliances have had a positive presence. We are against Greenfield mining, we want the existing mines to work as per rules and regulations and we want mine-closure to happen properly including the rehabilitation of the workers. We want our countries to move away from an economy dependent on mining in the short run.
The real change has to be in the development paradigm. We need greater information exchange and relationships with the communities to evolve this new paradigm. Otherwise we will run the risk of ending up only in targeting governments and investors and institutions jointly, delay the activities and denigrate their behaviour and definitely seek justice to the specific communities and yet feel inadequate. It is indeed a long way to go for the transformation we are seeking!