Oman Daily Observer

In Indian mining hub, farmers bring polluted land back to life

- — Thomson Reuters Foundation

PAPINAYAKA­NAHALLI:

For years, Indian farmer Chape Hanumaiya struggled to grow anything on his tiny plot of land — it was caked in the thick, red dust drifting from the iron ore mines that surrounded it.

But today, Hanumaiya and his wife are about to harvest pearl millet and sesame crops thanks to a pilot project that seeks to fight migration and boost food security around the southern city of Hosapete, the heart of India’s iron ore industry.

“My father grew millet and cotton on this land decades ago’’, said Hanumaiya, 46, sitting in the shade of a tree near his one-acre smallholdi­ng. “Then the mining grew and over the years, when we came to the field, our clothes, the grains and everything would be covered with mine dust. We slowly gave up farming.”

India is the world’s fourthbigg­est producer of iron ore, the key ingredient in steel-making, and demand for the commodity is expected to grow as the global constructi­on sector rebounds from Covid-19. That could prompt a surge in output, putting additional strain on local farmers and fuelling environmen­tal damage in mining areas. More than 15,000 acres of land, both private and communityo­wned, have been blighted by iron ore mining in India, affecting nearly 30,000 people, according to data research agency Land Conflict Watch.

Hanumaiya’s land was revived under a sustainabl­e co-operative agricultur­e scheme led by the Sakhi Trust nonprofit, which works with communitie­s affected by mining in the area and encourages organic farming.

So far, it has helped bring more than 200 hectares of barren farmland back into production — creating a safety net and shielding local people from the ups and downs of mining. “When the mines closed and agricultur­e failed, it forced people to migrate’’, said Nagesh R Sannaveer, a coordinato­r at Sakhi Trust.

“People were looking for food security and we started helping them get back to farming — from getting plots ready to cultivate to

organising collective farming for the landless’’, he added.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Trucks transporti­ng for iron ore mines parked along the Sandur bypass in southern state of Karnataka, India.
— Reuters Trucks transporti­ng for iron ore mines parked along the Sandur bypass in southern state of Karnataka, India.

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