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Good? Bad? Ugly?Mining Resumes in Goa Despite Opposition From Environmentalists By Steve Herman (Voice of America) A meeting of tribal communities is taking place on the grounds of a church in the ramshackle Goan fishing village of Betul. Catholic priests have raised the alarm about a huge bauxite mine and other development projects planned for the area. Rajendra Kerkar, a local fisherman, needs no convincing. Kerkar says he fears the worst if authorities allow a million tons of bauxite to be mined annually near his house. The jobs will go to outsiders, he says, and illegal mining has already contaminated the groundwater, causing kidney failure among villagers. Dust is blanketing the area and blasting is shaking their homes. This type of conflict between residents and mining companies is common in Goa. Goa exports 35 million tons of ore annually - mainly to China, Japan, South Korea and Europe - and the court ruling brought relief to the mining industry. It disappointed environmentalists, who say that for every ton of ore extracted, up to three tons of waste are produced. Mining here dates to the 1950's, when Goa was still a Portuguese colony. Goa Foundation director Claude Alvares says no one envisioned large-scale, open-cast extraction, which scars the environment and threatens the vitality of a major tourist destination."The leases were granted at that time on the assumption that they would be largely manually operated, small-scale," he explained. "And nobody ever thought that Japan would one day come here with all their huge excavating machines and enable a rapid increase in the way in which ore would be extracted." P.K. Mukherjee is managing director of Sesa Goa, one of the state's largest mining companies. He explains that large-scale extraction is more economical than what is called "pocket" mining. Environmentalists say it is just not a matter of restoring stripped land, however. Pravin Sabnis of the Save Goa Movement says the very presence of the mines upsets the ecological balance. Official statistics show mining surpassing tourism as Goa's biggest producer of foreign exchange. But architect Dean D'Cruz, an adviser to the state government on land use, says Goa does not benefit. "Mining is completely destructive of large tracts of land. And what it actually provides as economic development is a pittance. It doesn't even go to the state. It goes to the center [as] some royalty," he said. Sesa Goa's managing director Mukherjee asserts that Goa does benefit, in terms of jobs, duties and taxes. "Sustaining this employment itself is a direct contribution. Sales tax, excise duty, export duty nowadays, corporation tax and income tax," he said. "The biggest sales tax provider in Goa is the oil. It is basically getting consumed in the mining industry." Regardless of whether mine operators or environmentalists ultimately prevail, the clock is ticking for the industry. Mine owners say that with present extraction and production technologies, Goa will be out of iron ore in about 20 years. |
From the Discussion ForumIndian Constitution on Goa’s Identity. Jul 12, 08 | ARWIN Investigation required on new Residential Project in NUVEM Jul 4, 08 | navendu.shirali Goa's Identity Movement (UAE GOANS) Jun 29, 08 | ARWIN Our Unity is the Key to Saving Goa Jun 21, 08 | ARWIN Goa's Liberation Day Apr 15, 08 | ARWIN |