Uranium Unrest: On Uranium Mining In Meghalaya

Uranium Unrest: On Uranium Mining In Meghalaya 22 Sep 2025

Uranium Unrest: On Uranium Mining In Meghalaya

The Centre’s decision to mine uranium at any cost from Meghalaya, after deliberations with local leaders proved futile, is a troubling benchmark in India’s history of resource extraction.

About Uranium

  • Nature: Uranium is a heavy, radioactive metal found in the Earth’s crust.
  • Role in Nuclear Power: It serves as the fuel for nuclear power (Uranium-235 is the primary fuel in nuclear power reactors).
  • Significance: It is considered critical for India’s energy security and national security. 
    • It is also useful in Radiation therapy, radiography, and isotope production.

Background of Uranium Mining in Meghalaya

  • Long-standing Khasi Opposition: High-quality uranium deposits were discovered around 1984 in Meghalaya’s West Khasi Hills, specifically at Domiasiat and Wakhajiman.
    • Khasi groups have opposed uranium exploration in Domiasiat and Wahkaji since the 1980s.
    • The tribal people fear that mining will negatively impact local health due to radiation, contaminate their land, and endanger their culture, viewing the land as their identity and the legacy of their ancestors
  • The Office Memorandum (OM) Issue: Office Memorandums (OMs) are executive instruments issued without independent scrutiny, often bypassing procedural safeguards.
    • Exemption from Public Consultation: The recent OM by the Union Environment Ministry exempts atomic, critical, and strategic mineral mining from public consultation.
      • Impact on Local Communities: This exemption sidelines stewarding tribal communities, reducing them to bystanders in decisions that profoundly affect their land and livelihood.

Precedent from Jharkhand’s Uranium Mining

  • Issues of Singhbhum Tribes: The Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL) has mined uranium in Jharkhand’s Singhbhum district for decades, despite protests.
    • However, there are several reports of complaints from Jadugora, Jharkhand  including cancer and birth defects linked to radiation exposure, and contamination of rivers and wells. 
    • The concerns of the local people were disregarded, often because public hearing notices were issued in English or complex language locals could not understand.
    • The documentary Buddha Weeps in Jadugora highlighted the suffering, with one person quoted as saying that “development gave us radiation, not light.
  • Perception of Exploitation: For tribal communities, such experiences reinforce the belief that their land is seen merely as a “resource frontier” for the rest of India.
  • Federalism: The conflict represents a clash of federalism (Centre versus Local Autonomous Body) and a test of governance approach (top-down versus participatory).

Constitutional, Democratic and Judicial Safeguards

  • Sixth Schedule Autonomy: The Khasi Hills Autonomous District Council has powers under the Sixth Schedule to protect tribal rights and resources.
    • The Sixth Schedule is a special provision applicable to Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram, designed to protect tribal identity, culture, and resources.
    • Under the Sixth Schedule, Autonomous District Councils (ADCs) are established (10 across the four states)
    • The Khasi Hills Autonomous District Council (KHADC), which has jurisdiction over the deposit area, holds substantial powers related to land, forests, and local governance.
  • Violation of Consent Principles: The Centre’s stance signals that refusal is no longer acceptable, undermining the principle of free, prior, and informed consent.
  • Global Norms of Consent: International standards mandate that projects with irreversible ecological consequences must proceed only with genuine community consent.
  • Niyamgiri Precedent (2013): The Supreme Court in the Niyamgiri case upheld tribal rights by mandating community consent before mining.
  • Potential Court Challenge: Local groups may contest the OM’s validity in courts, invoking protections under the Fifth and Sixth Schedules of the Constitution.

Way Forward

  • Withdrawal of OM: The Environment Ministry must withdraw the OM to restore procedural safeguards and ensure mining governance does not bypass democratic consultation.
  • Exploring Alternatives: The state must consider other alternatives like Thorium (India holds 25% of global reserves; accelerate the three-stage nuclear programme). 
    • Increase focus on Renewable Energy (Solar and Wind). 
    • Continue importing uranium from nations like Kazakhstan and Canada
  • Dialogue Over Coercion: If protests intensify, the Centre must respond with renewed dialogue rather than force, as coercion will breed long-term resentment.
Mains Practice

Q. Examine the governance challenges arising from mining in ecologically sensitive and tribal areas, with reference to uranium extraction in Meghalaya. What measures can be adopted to ensure a sustainable and inclusive approach to resource management?  (10 Marks, 150 Words)

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Quick Revise Now !
UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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