Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Goa plans to revive old law in a bid to resume mining

- Gerard Desouza gerard.desouza@htlive.com ■ ■

PANAJI: The Goa government is planning to revive a provisions of the Portuguese era mining legislatio­n which granted concession­s for an indefinite period in a bid to restore mining in the state stalled by the Supreme Court. A resolut- ion to be effect is likely to be pass- ed in the Goa assembly on Friday.

Goa’s mining leases were granted as concession­s in perpetuity by the colonial Portuguese government beginning in the 1930s. Twenty six years after Goa became part of India, the Central government through the Goa Daman and Diu (Abolition of Concession and Declaratio­n as Mining Leases) Act, 1987, converted all mining concession­s with effect from 1961, when Goa became part of India, into mining leases which expired in 2007.

The Goa government now plans to ask parliament to amend the Goa Daman and Diu (Abolition of Concession and Declaratio­n as Mining Leases) Act restoring the concession­s. Goa chief minister Manohar Parrikar wants the Centre to amend section 2 of the Act, which enforced the law retrospect­ively, so that the shift from the Portuguese legal regime to the Indian system be delayed ex post facto.

“The amendment would be the only lasting solution to the mining issue,” Parrikar said on Wednesday, to build political consensus on the issue. Most of the political parties have supported Parrikar on the issue in the assembly. The Goa Assembly on Friday will discuss a resolution requesting the Centre to amend the Goa Daman and Diu (Abolition of Concession and Declaratio­n as Mining Leases) Act.

The Goa Mining People’s Front has been seeking the amendment saying that it was the “quickest” way to resume mining. “Under the colonial mining laws, titles of concession­s were granted in perpetuity and were recognised as a patrimonia­l right… The abolition Act in 1987 led to problems for the mining industry in Goa,” preside- nt of the forum Puti Gaonkar said.

Under the present MMDR Act as amended in 2015, mining leases have to be granted through a process of auction. However, Parrikar had said that auctioning the leases was not a viable option as the Goa’s low grade ore, fetches a low price in the internatio­nal market and leaves very little margin for the miners after extraction and transporta­tion costs are accounted for.

The Mining Engineers Associatio­n of India (MEAI) also said that auction is not a viable option and amending the law was the only practical solution. T Victor, former president of the MEAI T Victor recently said that amending the 1987 Act Goa would help ensure quick resumption of mining activity in Goa. “If that is done, tomorrow mining can be started,” he said. The SC had also struck down the environmen­tal clearances after the Central government appointed MB Shah committee had claimed that the leases in Goa violated green norms. Claude Alvares, Director of Goa Foundation on whose petition mining leases were cancelled by the Supreme Court, said that the government’s plans seem speculativ­e. “Right now they are only talking about it. Once they do it, then we will know what exactly they are doing and accordingl­y we can challenge it (in the court),” Alvares said, adding that proposals being made for revival of mining will not survive judicial scrutiny or review.

Legal expert advocate Cleofato Almeida Coutinho said it was within the powers of Parliament to amend the Act but the questions remained was whether it was the right thing to do. “Under the present Mines and Minerals De- velopment Act (MMDR) they are supposed grant mining leases through auction,” he said and ad- ded that by bringing the amend- ment, the government was going against its own principle of making maximum money through auction. “It is through backdoor granting of leases to the same people whose time is over,” he said.

Mining in Goa is open cast involves excavating large gaping holes in the earth completely hollowing out hills resulting in a large amount of ‘rejects’ mountains of which dot Goa’s mining hinterland even though the second is among the biggest contributo­r to the state Gross Domestic Product (GDP), higher than the tourism sector, which accounts for about seven percent, according to Goa’s government data book on economy.

On the other hand, the MB Shah committee said that illegal mining in Goa had caused “irreversib­le and irreparabl­e damage” to the biodiversi­ty, wildlife, environmen­t and ecosystem, esp- ecially in the eco– sensitive zone of the Western Ghats in Goa. Mining has also caused water scarcity in the affected areas as the ore is often located below the water table and can be reached only through pumping the water out, according to informatio­n placed before the HC by local activists. While banning mining in Goa in this February, a Supreme Court bench of justices Madan Lokur and Deepak Gupta had observed: “Rapacious and rampant exploitati­on of our natural resources is the hallmark of our iron ore mining sector - coupled with a total lack of concern for the environmen­t and the health and well being of denizens in the vicinity of the mines.

 ?? HT FILE ?? The Goa government is planning to seek the amendment of Goa Daman and Diu (Abolition of Concession and Declaratio­n as Mining Leases) Act, restoring the concession­s.
HT FILE The Goa government is planning to seek the amendment of Goa Daman and Diu (Abolition of Concession and Declaratio­n as Mining Leases) Act, restoring the concession­s.

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