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Politicians blocking sand mining project: experts
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            Nov 22, 2004 12:43 IST  
Politicians were trying to stymie a mineral sand mining project that could generate precious revenue for Kerala, experts have alleged.

Politicians were trying to stymie a mineral sand mining project that could generate precious revenue for Kerala, experts have alleged.
Experts say a proposed mineral sand mining project in Kerala’s Alappuzha district, which Chief Minister Oommen Chandy has shelved following widespread protests, will not harm the environment.
The private Cochin Minerals and Rutiles Ltd (CMRL), along with the state-owned Indian Rare Earths Ltd (IREL), had received sanction this year for mineral sand mining at Alappuzha. The beach sand reportedly contains rich deposits of minerals like ilmenites, rutile, zarcon, garnet and monazite.


After protests by locals and political parties, Chandy announced the future of the project would be decided after a team of experts was appointed to study its viability.

Placid Rodriguez, an expert on minerals, said the project had been cleared by the Ministry of Environment and the Atomic Energy Regulation Board.

If this project fails to take off,  the losers would be only Kerala and its people, said Rodriguez, a visiting professor at Chennai’s Indian Institute of Technology (IIT).

The beach sand deposits at Alappuzha are nature’s gift to Kerala because it contains precious mineral deposits. Not only would mining of this material bring in revenue, it would also help prevent background radiation, he said.

Former Banaras Hindu University vice-chancellor and metallurgy expert T.R. Anandaraman said he was pained over the manner in which politicians were scuttling prime projects.

We are really frustrated at what has been happening in Kerala. We have been waiting for long to see if the controversy ends. Now we have lost hope, rued T.K. Mukherjee, another expert.

But Congress leader V.M. Sudheeran, who has been protesting the project, said that mere academic opinions on its ecological viability would not help.

Only a detailed environment impact study would be acceptable to us after taking the local population into confidence, he said.

S.K. Bhattacharya, chairman of Durgapur Steel Plant, said if matters were transparent, controversies like these would not arise. Our progress is severely affected because of unnecessary controversies.

--Indo-Asian News Service
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