Shillong | Sep 29, 2015:
Meghalaya government on Tuesday submitted draft mining guidelines for coalmining to the National Green Tribunal (NGT) for coal mining activities in the state following the interim ban on coalmining in the state since April 2014.
“We have submitted the draft mining guidelines prepared by Meghalaya’s mining and geology department for coalmining to the NGT. The tribunal also asked the Union Coal and Forest and Environment ministries to take call on the guidelines,” Ranjan Mukherjee, counsel for the Meghalaya government, told IANS.
At a hearing held in New Delhi, the NGT principal bench headed by tribunal chairperson Justice Swatanter Kumar also directed the Coal and Forest and Environment ministries to take up matter on priority basis in consultation with state’s Chief Secretary P.B.O.Warjri, he said, adding that once the central ministries have completed the exercise, the draft guidelines would again be sent to the tribunal.
The green court, which continued with its April 17, 2014 interim order banning rat-hole coal mining, but allowed transportation of extracted coal at various intervals besides extended the time for payment of royalty on the extracted coal until October 31. “The NGT today passed a detailed order, and allowed the plea of the state government to extend the date for payment of royalty until October 31. The incessant rainfall had hampered the process of coal transportation in the state,” Mukherjee said.
He said the estimated amount of extracted coal, which is still lying in the open, was around 50 lakh metric tons. In its last order, the tribunal had directed that the coalminers should pay royalty on extracted coal by September 30.
In its July 31 order, the tribunal allowed the transportation of the extracted coal until November 30. The tribunal had also noted in the July 31 order that the time extended was the “last and final opportunity to the state government”.
Mukherjee also informed that from July 31 until September 28, 2015, the Meghalaya government had collected around Rs 243 crore as royalty on the extracted coal besides generated Rs 77 crore towards the environment protection fund during the same period.
From the period November 2014 onwards and until date, the legal counsel said the government has generated around Rs 650 crore as royalty and payment to the environment protection fund.
(Source: http://www.nagalandpost.com/)