FirstpostIndiaBeer country Goa, battles over waterApr 6, 2013

By Mayabhushan NagvenkarPanaji: Draught beer may run riot here, but in this 
tropical Eden called Goa, water is fast becoming a contentious commodity, 
thanks to decades of rampant and indiscriminate open cast mining.Over a 100 
open cast mines streaked with iron and manganese deposits, most of which have 
already pierced through the state’s water table at nearly 60 mts, have not only 
resulted in an increased content of manganese in the several rivers and lakes 
which are located within the state’s mining belt, but has also triggered a 
water shortage.Now Gauns has accused Parrikar of misguiding people by 
positively linking mining activity to ground water recharge. AFPOnly while the 
Chief MinisterManohar Parrikar is victim to a bizarre belief that the cause of 
the water shortage is the ban on mining, his Public Works Department minister 
Ramkrishna Dhavalikar does a cake-eating Marie Antoinette when asked why the 
water in the state’s reservoirs was being increasingly laced with 
manganese.“Having little manganese in drinking water is good,” he told the Goa 
legislative assembly this week.And how little is little?According to tests 
conducted by Dhavalikar’s own department this week, while the permissible level 
of manganese in potable water is 0.7 mg per litre, levels of the mineral in the 
Selaulim dam has reached 1.2 mg per litre. Located in South Goa and ringed by 
several mining pits, the dam caters to over half of Goa’s 15 lakh million 
population.Sources, however, said that that the levels of manganese also scaled 
to 3 mg several times in the few months, before the mining ban came into force 
in October, 2012. According to noted green activist Ramesh Gauns mining has 
played havoc with the state’s water table.“This issue of sudden groundwater 
depletion is a very vital and is being dealt with very casually and very 
irresponsibly. This government is fooling the people of Goa. Mining has played 
havoc with the ground water scenario here,” Gauns told Firstpost. Gauns is not 
the only person who makes that charge.The Supreme Court’s central empowered 
committee (CEC) was assigned to inspect Goa’s mining areas by the apex court, 
which is hearing a public interest litigation (PIL) on the illegal mining 
issue, filed by noted lawyer Prashant Bhushan. After inspecting several mining 
sites and villages near by the mining belt, these are the findings they came up 
with.“There are a large number of mining leases wherein the extraction of 
mineral below the ground water table has been permitted/is being undertaken. 
During the site visit the CEC received a number of representations that the 
mining below the ground level is adversely affecting the water availability in 
the nearby areas and such mining is damaging the aquifers and consequently the 
charging of the ground water is adversely affected. It has also been 
represented that such mining is resulting in increased salinity of the ground 
water and that the silt deposition from the mining overburden has degraded the 
soil fertility in the adjoining agricultural fields. Almost all the dug wells 
have dried up”.The logic presented by the state government in the recent past 
to explain why water levels in the state’s rivers have depleted is loaded with 
irony. Chief minister Manohar Parrikar claims that the ban on mining, has in 
fact shrunk water levels to such an extent that he had to release millions of 
cubic tons of water from the mining pits to recharge it.“Because they (mining 
cos) were unable to pump out the water, the water level is down now,” said 
Parrikar last month.Parrikar wasn’t the first to come up with this 
googly.Mining magnate Avdhoot Timblo, who is known for his proximity to the 
chief minister in recent times, came up with another ‘jewel’ recently when he 
said that mining pits actually help conserve water.“Mining activity near the 
Selaulim reservoir had resulted in 70 lakes, which store water,” Timblo said, 
adding that if the state’s capital Panaji, had to rid itself of its water 
shortage woes, it should start a mining pit in its vicinity too.Goa’s open cast 
mining requires mine operators to drill the earth in a circular cavernous pit 
form. The pit is gradually ringed by a huge, almost volcanic wall of rejects 
which are piled around the deepening mining put. The drilling cuts through 
several underground water sources, resulting in hundreds of thousands of tons 
of ground water accumulating in the same pitsalong with rain water. The water 
is ritually pumped out by the mining companies before starting operations post 
monsoon. Now Gauns has accused Parrikar of misguiding people by positively 
linking mining activity to ground water recharge.“The water which is being 
pumped out of the mines is ground water, which is trapped in these pits . If 
the mining activity hadn’t descended below the water table, there would be no 
need to pump it out at all,” he says.In Goa, all groundwater is covered under 
the Goa Ground Water Regulation Act. Let the mines also be brought under this 
same notification and Act,” he says, adding that a survey needed to be 
conducted to co-relate the level of water in the rivers, to the mining 
activity.Chief engineer of the state Water Resources department ST Nadkarni’s 
in his comments toFirstpost appears to back Gauns over Parrikar over the issue 
of retention of water in mining pits.“In the mines, it is a combination of both 
surface water as well as ground water. Surface water accumulates as well as 
some groundwater percolates there,” Nadkarni said, adding that his agency was 
involved in pumping water out of the mining pits into Khandepar river which 
feeds the water purifying unit at Opa in north Goa.But there is a way out of 
the water level conundrum as suggested by the CEC, has suggested that mining 
below the groundwater level should be is permitted only in exceptional 
circumstances and that too with adequate checks and balances.“The mining 
operations below the groundwater level should be permitted only after a 
detailed study for such mining leases is carried out and it is conclusively 
established that mining operations are not likely to adversely affect the 
availability of potable water for the local population and will not have any 
adverse environmental impact on the water regime,” the CEC has advocated in its 
report submitted to the apex court.                                             
                                     

Reply via email to