Charudutta Panigrahi, Gurugram, 23 October 2022
Henceforth the idiom ‘as white as snow’ would seem so much out of place. In coal mining regions in Siberia, the Kuzbass area, the snow is black. The landscape is covered in toxic black snow. The coal dust from open pit mines covers the snow black. The health of the people there has been severely damaged. Cancer, child cerebral palsy, and tuberculous rates have spiked over the years. The black envelope is so thick and spread out that its harder to find white snow than black snow. More so during the winter. After the snow falls, there is only black everywhere.
The paddy of Sundergarh is black. Hemagir block of Sundergarh district is enveloped in black toxic coal dust exacerbated by the trucks ferrying coal from nearby open cast mines. The coal mining and the dust produced kill both the lives and livelihoods of the local population. COPD cases in the entire region are rising. In the last decade the cases have gone up by almost 45%. The health effects associated with coal mining are severe. They cause various pulmonary diseases, including coal workers’ pneumoconiosis (CWP) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The coal miners are exposed to crystalline silica dust, which causes silicosis, COPD, and other morbidities. These lung diseases have resulted in impairment, disability, and premature deaths. Black lung disease occurs with the inhalation of coal dust over a long period of time. It mainly affects coal miners, and that is CWP as mentioned above. Vulnerability to COVID increases manifold. Compared to the general population, coal belt population has higher incidences of respiratory illness and Hemagir block is no exception. Ratanpur, Chhatabar, Luabahal are among the worst sufferers. The coal mining resultant dust has not only surged the morbidities and the mortalities in the area but has also directly hit the livelihoods of the farmers. Suru Mishra, popularly called Suru Babu, is a prominent social engineer and activist working on socio-economic issues of the marginalised in Sundergarh. He has been consistently advocating for safer living conditions for the people. He has been championing ‘responsible coal mining’.
The discoloured paddy could not be sold to the millers & LAMPCS (Large-sized Adivasi Multipurpose Cooperative Societies Ltd. in Gopalpur and Luabahal). They refused to procure black paddy. Black rice might sound exotic and contain high protein, and it gets its signature black-purple colour from a pigment called anthocyanin, which has potent antioxidant properties, but discoloured black paddy of Hemagir block is cancer inducing poison. The Kulda and Basundhara mines have created havoc. The coal dust has polluted swathes of agricultural fields and acres of water bodies.
The district and block agriculture officers, the soil scientists, and others have conducted extensive ground inspections and have reported officially that the discolouration of the paddy is so thick and deep seated that even after washing the traces of black dust particles, a tar like paste remains on the surface of the paddy grains. The deposits get thicker and intensely layered. Around 3,500 trucks pass through the 45 villages daily spewing toxic dust. It is cruel but true that the indigenous communities, the Hill Khadia, Bhuyan and Gond, are most affected. The air is a lethal mix of coal and fly ash. Every breathing organism in the area is severely afflicted. Vulnerability to Black Lung disease is dangerously rising.
Many reports have been written and the locals have voiced their appeal for right to life. The Ministry of Environment and Forests had instituted a site inspection and monitoring report, about three years ago, which stated that the concentrations of particulate matters PM10 and PM2.5 were above permissible limits in the area. The report suggested that more sprinkling of water and control measures needed to be undertaken on priority. Despite local suffering having been widely expressed, the expert appraisal committee (EAC) of the Ministry recommended environmental clearance for expanding the capacity of the Kulda open cast coal mine by 20%! What about the people, their next generations, their health, agriculture, and water bodies?
The mine’s output will now increase from the current 14 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) to 19.60 MTPA. Mahanadi Coalfields Limited (MCL), the mines owner, is expected to plant 100,000 native trees with broad leaves along the villages and 50,000 trees along the transportation route. Can they implement that on the ground, or can they plant the trees in two years? MCL has also been directed by the Ministry to install air quality monitoring stations in the mining area. So far there has been no monitoring of the dust emissions from the entire mining operations including the transportation. The transportation companies and the mining companies work in cahoots. The scale of the expansion should not further marginalise the local communities and push them to a dark life with increasingly violent onslaught of land acquisition, displacement, corruption, intimidation, and the toxic, killer pollution.
Health emergencies are rising, the livelihoods of the local farmers are dwindling, the agriculture lands are acquired for mining and the youth are rudderless, jobless. In Ratanpur village, 25 acres of cultivated land was recently acquired for mining. The scheduled castes and tribes in the area are small, marginal landholders who, traditionally, cultivated in the adjoining forests. Even their claims for titles/”patta” for the forest land under the Forest Rights Act, 2006 have gone unheard. The coal companies are obviously trying to earn millions of carbon credits from the coal expansion. Nothing should stop that, but this shouldn’t be at the cost of human lives.
The number of environmental protests is on the rise. Coal is one of the cornerstones of climate diplomacy and we in Odisha are grappling with rejuvenating the economy after the coronavirus pandemic and recurring natural disasters.
Let’s tackle our Black Life with Black Lungs in Sundergarh, urgently.
This article had been published earlier elsewhere. It has been republished here with some modifications with the author’s consent.