Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

NGT junks order easing mining rules

ENVIRONMEN­TAL IMPACT NGT noted that notificati­ons were in conflict with sustainabl­e sand mining guidelines

- Jayashree Nandi

NEW DELHI : The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has overruled the Union environmen­t ministry’s three 2016 notificati­ons that exempted mining of minor minerals like sand in up to 25 ha area from prior public consultati­on and the environmen­tal impact assessment (EIA).

“EIA is an integral and most critical component of environmen­tal clearance as it is only through the EIA that the potential impacts and potential risks of a project can be assessed and mitigation measures formulated…,’’ an NGT chairperso­n Adarsh Kumar Goel-led bench said in its order on Tuesday.

“…by exempting EIA and environmen­tal management plan, critical environmen­tal aspects like anticipate­d impacts, mitigation measures and additional studies involving public consultati­on, risk assessment, social impact, rehabilita­tion and resettleme­nt action plans stand exempted.”

The bench noted that the ministry’s notificati­ons were in conflict with the 2016 sustainabl­e sand mining guidelines, which said an EIA should address the environmen­tal impacts of minor mineral mining.

The ministry had amended the 2006 EIA notificati­on and put mining of minor minerals in an area up to 25 ha in B-2 category. An environmen­tal clearance is required under the category. But it is exempted from public hearings and EIA. The notificati­on bypassed any detailed environmen­tal study and only asked for basic project informatio­n.

A district environmen­t impact assessment authority was granted powers for environmen­tal clearance for mines spread over an area up to 25 ha.

Petitioner Vikrant Tongad had contended that the district level assessment authority had no scientific expertise in assessing environmen­tal impacts.

Even within the B2 category mines, up to 5 ha areas were exempted from devising an environmen­tal management plan. This had allowed miners to break large mines into patches of less than 5 ha to avoid any environmen­tal scrutiny. “These provisions quite apparently are more mine-centric rather than striving a balance between mining and environmen­t,” the bench noted.

NGT directed public hearings and EIA for minor mineral mines with 5 to 25 ha area. It added state environmen­t impact assessment authority would evaluate smaller mines of up to 5 ha instead of district level body.

The bench ordered the ministry to incorporat­e a procedure to calculate the annual rate and timeframe for replenishm­ent after mining is stopped in an area and frame guidelines for calculatio­n of the cost of restitutio­n of damage caused to mined out areas.

The NGT said the exemption for minor minerals violated a 2012 Supreme Court order, which held that all mining leases depending on their size would need to obtain environmen­tal clearance.

The Builders Associatio­n of India (BAI) said the order will have a major impact on the constructi­on and infrastruc­ture projects. “While the ministry is trying to ease the process, NGT is creating hindrances,’’ said BAI executive secretary Raju John. He called it “a very unstable situation” for constructi­on industries. “Without excavating, one cannot construct anything.”

 ?? HT ARCHIVE ?? The government had exempted mining of certain minerals from requiring regulatory clearances, a decision now scrapped.
HT ARCHIVE The government had exempted mining of certain minerals from requiring regulatory clearances, a decision now scrapped.

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