Troubled Vedanta loses appeal for controversial Orissa refinery
October 22nd, 2010 - 12:29 pm ICT by ANILondon, Oct. 22 (ANI): The Indian government has blocked Vedanta Resources’ plan to expand its highly controversial alumina refinery below the Niyamgiri hills in Orissa, in the latest setback for the company.
India’s Environment Ministry has rejected Vedanta’s plan to expand the refinery six fold, and demanded immediate improvements to the existing plant.
Over a hundred families lost their homes when the refinery was built, and many others lost their land and livelihood.
One man told Survival, ‘The site where the refinery is now, the sources of water were in abundance. But now the bauxite dust is mixing into the wells and the streams. We’re in great trouble, nothing is right here.’
The refinery was part of a massive mining project that would have seen the sacred mountain of the Dongria Kondh tribe destroyed. After years of resistance from the tribe, and a huge international campaign from organizations including Survival International and Amnesty, the Indian government axed the mine.
An Environmental Court has compounded this decision by revoking Vedanta’s ‘environmental clearance’ for the mine, after members of the Dongria Kondh tribe appealed against it. The judge declared that the original clearance had not considered the ‘human miseries which the project is likely to inflict.’
An expert committee tasked with investigating Vedanta’s activities in Orissa concluded that the company had worked on the expansion of the refinery without official permission, a ’serious offence’.
Vedanta appealed to continue with its plan to expand the refinery regardless, but failed.
In a different Indian state, Tamil Nadu, the Madras High Court ordered the closure of Vedanta’s notorious Tuticorin copper smelter, concluding that it was releasing pollution into the air and water with ‘devastating impact’. India’s Supreme Court is now examining the case.
Stephen Corry, Director of Survival said: “Vedanta is learning the hard way that it cannot ride roughshod over tribal peoples forever. Other companies should learn from Vedanta’s mistakes: before investing time and money in a project, a company must gain the consent of local tribal communities.” (ANI)
- Vedanta won't give fight over Orissa hill tribe's sacred mountain - Feb 01, 2011
- India junks Vedanta's mining bid on environment concerns - Aug 24, 2010
- Indo - Americans Applauds India - Aug 25, 2010
- Third blow for Vedanta in a month as mine faces new probe - Jul 15, 2010
- UK Government blasts Vedanta for mistreatment of Oriya tribals - Oct 12, 2009
- Church of England sells Vedanta shares over Orissa human rights - Feb 06, 2010
- Vedanta's controversial mine gets backing of India's PM - Jun 30, 2010
- Vedanta: Apex court moved against denial of forest clearance - Mar 10, 2011
- Apex court questions environment ministry on Niyamgiri (Lead) - Aug 01, 2011
- Vedanta mine project rejection, a major win for Dongria tribe: Survival Intl. - Aug 24, 2010
- Tribal rights body demands probe of Kalinganagar violence - Jun 02, 2010
- Government panel nixes Vedanta's Orissa project (Lead) - Aug 16, 2010
- Orissa tribe to Avatar director: now you watch our film - Feb 08, 2010
- Survival International appeals to UN to stop bauxite mine in Orissa - Jul 15, 2009
- Indo-Americans laud India for disallowing mining of "sacred" mountain in Orissa - Aug 25, 2010
Tags: air and water, alumina refinery, copper smelter, corry, environmental clearance, expert committee, impact india, indian government, international campaign, latest setback, livelihood, madras high court, mining project, miseries, offence, orissa, sacred mountain, sources of water, tamil nadu, vedanta resources