HC panel tells Meghalaya to draw plan to curb illegal coal mining


HC Panel Tells Meghalaya to Draw Plan to Curb Illegal Coal Mining

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
Pre-2014 Rat-hole mining dominant; largely unregulated under the Sixth Schedule (tribal land rights); no environmental clearances granted to any rat-hole mine. [S2]
April 17, 2014 NGT bans rat-hole mining and transportation of freshly mined coal in Meghalaya; allows movement of stock already piled near mines. [S1]
2014–2018 Non-compliance widespread; multiple interim committee reports document violations. [S2]
December 2018 Ksan mine disaster — 15 workers trapped in a flooded illegal coal mine in East Jaintia Hills; most bodies never recovered; catastrophe galvanises judicial action. [S1]
July 2019 Supreme Court upholds NGT ban; simultaneously, "scientific mining" via open-cast technique proposed as regulated alternative. [S1]
April 2022 Meghalaya High Court constitutes the one-member Justice B.P. Katakey (retd.) Committee to monitor compliance with the SC/NGT ban and check illegal coal transportation. [S3]
January 2025 Union Ministry of Coal approves three coal mining leases for Meghalaya (Saryngkham-A and Lumia-khi-Wah Sarang in East Jaintia Hills; Pyndeng-shalang in West Khasi Hills) — a step toward legalised scientific mining. [S1]
27th Interim Report (2025) Committee recommends drone surveillance across all districts. [S2]
February 5, 2026 Explosion at illegal mine, Mynsyngat, East Jaintia Hills — 34 deaths. [S1]
June 17, 2026 38th Interim Report — 15-day deadline for State comprehensive action plan. [S3]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Administrative

Economic

Social

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. NGT banned rat-hole coal mining in Meghalaya on April 17, 2014. [S1]
  2. The Supreme Court upheld the NGT ban on rat-hole mining in July 2019. [S1]
  3. The Justice B.P. Katakey (retd.) Committee was constituted by the Meghalaya High Court in April 2022 to monitor compliance with the SC/NGT ban. [S3]
  4. The committee's 38th interim report was submitted on June 17, 2026 — it gave the State 15 days to frame a comprehensive action plan. [S3]
  5. Approximately 24,000 illegal rat-hole coal mines were found operational in Meghalaya as of end-2024. [S1]
  6. The Supreme Court ordered Meghalaya to deposit Rs 100 crore for illegal mining damage. [S1]
  7. Rat-hole mining has two sub-types: side-cutting (along hill slopes) and box-cutting (vertical pit + horizontal tunnels). [S2]
  8. Meghalaya's coal belt is concentrated in East Jaintia Hills, West Khasi Hills, and Garo Hills. [S1]
  9. The Sixth Schedule of the Constitution historically governed tribal land/sub-surface rights in Meghalaya, complicating central enforcement of MMDR Act. [S2]
  10. The December 2018 Ksan mine disaster trapped 15 miners in a flooded illegal coal mine in East Jaintia Hills — most bodies never recovered. [S1]
  11. 34 labourers died in a February 5, 2026 dynamite explosion at an illegal mine in Mynsyngat, East Jaintia Hills. [S1]
  12. The Ministry of Coal approved three scientific mining leases in Meghalaya in January 2025. [S1]
  13. The NGT Act, 2010 provides the statutory basis for NGT jurisdiction over environmental matters including mining bans. [S2]
  14. The Katakey Committee's 27th interim report (2025) recommended drone surveillance for all districts of Meghalaya. [S2]
  15. Illegal Meghalaya coal finds demand partly from Bangladesh, sustaining cross-border supply chains post-ban. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: - GS-III: Environment and ecology (mining impacts, biodiversity, pollution); Resource mobilisation; Governance failures in extractive industries. - GS-II: Functioning of the judiciary (judicial monitoring committees, SC/NGT interplay); Federalism (Centre-State relations in mining, Sixth Schedule); Role of constitutional bodies.

Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: "Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment"; "Mineral resources; Major crops and cropping patterns" - GS-II: "Structure, organization and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary"; "Issues relating to poverty and hunger" (tribal livelihoods)

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Rat-hole coal mining in Meghalaya represents a governance paradox — the state simultaneously prohibits and perpetuates it. Critically examine the institutional mechanisms that have failed to enforce the NGT/Supreme Court ban and suggest a sustainable way forward." (GS-III / GS-II) 2. "The Sixth Schedule of the Indian Constitution, while designed to protect tribal rights, has inadvertently created regulatory blind spots in mineral-rich states. Discuss with reference to coal mining in Meghalaya." (GS-II) 3. "Judicial monitoring committees are increasingly being used as a substitute for executive enforcement in environmental cases. Evaluate their effectiveness and limitations using the Meghalaya illegal coal mining case as an example." (GS-II / GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Green Tribunal (NGT) — Structure & Powers NGT's April 2014 order is the founding legal act of this saga; its jurisdiction, bench structure, and enforcement limitations are directly tested.
Sixth Schedule of the Constitution Explains why central mining law was historically inapplicable to Meghalaya tribal lands; core to the legal complexity.
MMDR Act, 1957 & 2021 Amendment Governs mining licensing, royalties, and the District Mineral Foundation (DMF); frequently confused with NGT jurisdiction.
Sand Mining / Illegal Mining — National Picture UPSC frequently frames Meghalaya alongside sand mining and stone quarrying as examples of illegal resource extraction governance.
Ksan Mine Disaster, 2018 Often used as a case study on industrial safety, disaster response, and the limits of judicial orders.
District Mineral Foundation (DMF) & PMKKKY DMF funded from mining royalties — illegal mining deprives tribal communities of these welfare funds.
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification Mining clearances, EIA exemptions, and ex-post-facto clearances are a recurring exam theme.
Coal Sector Reforms (Commercial Mining, 2020) The 2020 opening of coal auctions and the 2025 Meghalaya leases link to broader coal sector liberalisation.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong banning authority: Students often say the Supreme Court banned rat-hole mining — the NGT banned it first (April 2014); the Supreme Court upheld the ban in 2019. Two separate events.
  2. Wrong committee constitution body: The Katakey Committee was constituted by the Meghalaya High Court, not the Supreme Court or NGT.
  3. Sixth Schedule confusion: Meghalaya is under the Sixth Schedule (not Fifth Schedule); Fifth Schedule covers other tribal states. The distinction affects which constitutional provisions apply to land and sub-surface rights.
  4. "Scientific mining" ≠ lifting of ban: The 2019 Supreme Court order and 2025 lease approvals relate to regulated open-cast scientific mining — they do not legalise rat-hole mining, which remains banned.
  5. Ministry confusion: Coal regulation falls under Ministry of Coal; environmental enforcement under MoEFCC; NGT is under the judiciary (not any ministry). Conflating these in Mains answers costs marks.

11. Sources

Sources: - Illegal mining SC order - NGT ban on rat-hole mining - Rat-hole mining mapping challenge - PIB — Coal production Meghalaya - The Hindu — HC panel article