"HELL ON EARTH" (Documentary re: Effects of Coal Mining)

john_torres's picture

REPOST:

New film exposes "hell on earth" in India's eastern coal fields
Published Date: 05-05-2009
Type: Report
Source Date: 24-04-2009
Broadcast last month on British TV's Channel Four in its "Unreported World" series, "India: Children of the Inferno" scorchingly depicts the plight of thousands of poor rural Indians, many of them Indigenous, trapped within the Jharia coal fields of Jharkhand state.
Their only source of fuel is coal collected by hand from the slag heaps, as spontaneous combustion and toxic fumes swirl around them.
According to the film's reporter and director, the only prospect offered to the women, children and men sacrificed to this massive enterprise, is removal en bloc from their own land, as extraction inexorably expands over several hundred square kilometres.
"The effect India's reliance on coal could have on climate change in the future is causing global concern", they comment. "But, here on the ground, it's clear that for locals, a nightmarish existence is already a reality."
Nor should we forget that such an existence is shared by those working for the coal company itself, in conditions which are hardly better.
A Vision of Hell
Channel 4 website
24th April 2009
"Unreported World" reveals a vision of hell in North East India, where the earth is literally on fire as vast subterranean coal fires burn out of control beneath towns and villages, children mine coal day in day out, and half a million people are being moved out of their ancestral villages to make way for the coal mines fuelling India's growth.
Reporter Aidan Hartley and director Edward Watts begin their journey in the Jharia coalfields in Jharkand state. The air is filled with smoke and poisonous gas as fires smoulder in the ground all around them. The flames are from underground coal seams which are spontaneously combusting over an area of several hundred square kilometres.
Huge open cast and underground mines produce hundreds of millions of coal to feed the electricity and steel industries. But these mines are also threatening the health and homes of millions as the fires they've caused encroach on towns and villages. The team visits Bokapardi village, where hundreds of families live above the fire. The land beneath their feet is hot and everywhere smoke and sulphurous gases escape from thousands of fissures and cracks.
Despite living in these terrible conditions, locals tell Hartley that they are so poor they have no choice but to stay in the village. The only way to make a living is by scavenging coal and the team films hundreds of people, including young children, gathering coal. One young girl, Dolly, says she works every day of the year gathering coal. Walking shoeless across sharp stones and hot coals, she tells Hartley that she makes less than a pound a day. Like the rest of her family, she's never been to school.
Other locals tell Hartley that this wasteland was once a place of forests, rivers and farms. But mining is destroying the environment, forcing farmers to become coal scavengers. The team finds entire families working together in precarious shafts they've dug by hand.
A local doctor describes how villagers are now suffering from a battery of lung diseases caused by air pollution. One woman tells Hartley that her husband and a daughter were killed by respiratory illnesses. Now she is very sick, and her surviving daughter is suffering regular nosebleeds.
The team moves on to the village of Hutchuktar. Locals tell Hartley that just two years ago everything was green. Now, everything is black and cracks are opening up in homes as the fires advance beneath the village.
Hartley meets with the state-owned Bharat Coking Coal Limited (BCCL) company which runs the mines, to discuss the situation with villages where locals are being asked to leave their ancestral lands. He discusses BCCL plans to move up to 500,000 people out of fire-affected areas to make way for new mines.
Moving on again, the team travels to Belguria, a housing scheme funded by BCCL to accommodate people it wants to move. They are shown the one bedroom houses where families often numbering up to ten are expected to live.
BCCL managing director T.K Lahiri tells the team that compensation is offered to anyone who qualifies for it under the company's guidelines.
But in another town, Kasunda, the risks of staying are clear. A former resident tells Hartley that two years ago the ground beneath his home just collapsed and several houses were engulfed. He and his family survived but his brother and six others of his family were all killed. What was once a thriving place with 500 houses, a school, and a temple is now a ghost town.
Everywhere the team travels in Jharia the fires are burning. The effect India's reliance on coal could have on climate change in the future is causing global concern. But, here on the ground, it's clear that for locals, a nightmarish existence is already a reality.
________________________________________
"I have never witnessed anything like it"
Aidan Hartley
Channel Four website
24th April 2009
I have never witnessed anything like India´s coalmine fires. Two images will always stick in my mind.
One is the sight of an entire cliff of coal on fire, millions of tonnes of coal burning out of control with red and blue flames in the smoggy twilight.
The scale of the fires -- caused by coal seams heating up on exposure to open air due to poor mining practices until they burst into flames - is frightening as they spread across 360 square kilometres of Jharia´s coalfields in Jharkand state.
The other is when we saw Devanand, an eight-year-old boy, rolling two heavy lumps of coal across a wasteland. Too poor to go to school, he was pushing the coal home for his mother to cook with -- but there were no houses for miles around and he was making such slow progress it was agonising to watch.
And that was the paradox of the story. India wants to extract as much coal as it can to drive its economy and drag citizens out of abject poverty.
But are people like Devanand victims or beneficiaries of this master plan?
Multitudes of local people here once lived as farmers. They were poor but they had dignity and now - well, many of them are just poor. And now India´s state coal mining company wants to move 500,000 people out of the fire-hit area of Jharia, the largest migration of people in India since Partitition.
India already extracts 400 million tonnes of coal a year and that figure is set to increase.
While India has a right to economic growth, this surely does not excuse the country from allowing coalfields to burn unchecked, an act of extraordinary environmental vandalism mirrored in other countries including the USA.
At a time when the world debates how to urgently cut carbon emissions, the sheer scale of the inferno alarmed me. I wondered what the point of putting a little windmill on your home is, or fussing about your personal carbon footprint, when there´s this going on.
Shooting the film was a physical ordeal. Producer Ed Watts and I would come out of the mines each day blackened head to foot with coal dust. The searing heat of the fires and poisonous fumes scoured our lungs and smarted the eyes. We went through three cameras because clouds of dust kept clogging them up.
It astonished me that people had to live in this hell, where so many of those toiling as coal scavengers and miners were children. They suffer terrible illnesses due to the pollution and life expectancy is shorter than most parts of India.
But at the same time I found the beauty of the locations stunning. We´d be filming in clouds of smog and dust and out of the murk would emerge a line of women in brightly coloured saris, walking out of the mines and into a village with golden straw haystacks and waggle-eared water buffalo chewing the cud among cosy mud houses.
The forests being eaten up by the coalmines are the places where the Buddha lived and found enlightenment 2,400 years ago. This is the fast vanishing home of India´s indigenous tribal people - and until recently it was a natural paradise. The name `Jharkand´ means `land of trees´ and it was once full of tigers and wildlife. This is now just a memory as trees, hills, rivers and springs are pulverised by the bulldozers.
It was a privilege to make this film about an issue for a country at such a crossroads.
http://www.channel4.com/programmes/unreported-world/articles/india-repor...
Clips from the film are viewable at: http://www.channel4.com/programmes/unreported-world/video/series-2009/ep...

On Coal Mining Again (Sir JOM, please enlighten us)

john_torres's picture

• With due respect Sir, can you please elaborate essential points on how this so-called “sustainable mining” be achieved in Catanduanes? Seems that you have technical-know-how and personal expertise regarding this issue. Please educate us, it is beyond our comprehension.
• Please see below claims:
1. Coal Mining polluted the rivers at their sites;
2. Coal Mining destroyed mangroves;
3. Coal Mining damaged corral reefs;
4. Coal Mining ruined agriculture, and
5. Coal Mining damaged the world's biodiversity.
Kindly refute the above by citing areas and locations where Coal Mining has not devastated our natural habitat.
• In denouncing these findings, please present facts and valid evidences when we believed that: "Coal is washed and treated before it is loaded on trucks and trains, the excess water left over of which, called coal slurry or sludge are stored in open coal impoundments. Coal sludge is a mix of water, coal dust, clay and toxic chemicals such as arsenic mercury, lead, copper, and chromium. Impoundments are held in place by mining debris, making them very unstable - waiting for another disaster"
• Kindly prove them wrong when scientists say that: "Coal is the dirtiest source of energy. Coal plants emit billions of tonnes of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere each year that accounts to 72% of CO2 emissions from power generation and 41% of total global emissions of CO2 from fossil fuels. Coal burning also emits chemicals including Sulphur dioxide (SO2), Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) and other Particulate Matters (PM) that are hazardous to health"
• Now, please expound and share your noble ideas why our people should allow the operation(s) of Coal Mining in Catanduanes. Kindly enlighten us.

Hi John

Jorge O. Macenas's picture

Thank you John.
Areas where there are coal mineralization, abounds with coal outcroppings where rain, erosion and other form of run off eventually settle into the sea passing through waterways. In the case of Payo coal prospect, the coal run off flows into swamps then towards the sea. There are also out-croppings in Ananong, and Ogbong areas which are similar in mineralization to the Payo coal prospect raising the possibility the swamplands of Viga and Payo are possibly sitting on top of coal deposits. So far there is no ecological disaster.
The Canardeco coal stockpile has been left unprotected in camp ermitanyo for decades allowing run off to flow into tributaries and rivers. So far, I could not recall fish die off, corals obliterated, nipa growth are stunted in the Payo side of swamplands because of the exposed coal stockpile there.
Coal as fuel is considered dirty, yes its true but do we have an option in terms of energy self reliance? Wind power? Solar Power? Hydro? these are good sources but has negative effects too. Wind power is very expensive, unreliable and creates noise pollution (I visited a number of wind mill farms in Aarhus, Denmark and got first hand experience how awful the sound was.), Solar power requires deep cycle batteries made of lead, acid and hazardous chemicals to store power. Hydro means poorest of the poor kaingeros, wood cutters and forest product gatherers will be deprived of livelihood to protect wide areas of forested watershed.
I'm not really sure if coal mining requires chemicals to wash off the impurities. During my time, seawater was used to remove clay and other impurities. Most of the coal are mined, shipped and used as is.
Philippines uses insignificant quantity of coal compared to the major coal users like China, US, and many industrialized countries. In fact, Philippine coal usage contributes microscopically to the global warming. It is very unfair to the present Philippine generation to be deprived of cheap indigenous energy source simply because of perceived future threat. We need to utilize, manage these natural resources in a sustainable responsible way. There is where people vigilance should be.

"COAL MINING @ Sir JOM

john_torres's picture

Sir JOM, I deeply appreciate your prompt reply.
I already absorbed and understood you points. However, the paradigm that you presented seems to be ridiculous. Why? We are talking here of the ecological catastrophe brought about by “full-blast and wide-scale operations of Coal Mining” and not the effects of the untouched coal deposits beneath our grounds. The Coal deposits underneath the swampland of Viga and Payo have not contributed yet into polluting our environs because they are still untapped and un-mined. Once Monte Oro starts siphoning-out our Coal reserves, definitely, it’s a different story.
Unfortunately, you still left my questions unanswered.

Great Info JOM

Dave's picture

I'm happy to hear that canardeco's irresponsible handling has not as yet devastated mentioned resources. is it because the stock pile's run off has not yet fully reach those resources? is the run off on the way to those resources? or the poison is as yet too negligible to kill?

Nevertheless we all know that so much amount of run off will eventually kill. We don't want that. Canardeco's irresponsibility is enough! See our system cannot even compel the owner to properly clean up their acts! What if the same careless system is used in a massive mining venture... as planned? Danger there!

Mining needs huge capital. Most of these companies (all companies in fact) economise on operational cost even if it means life. Need not look any farther... rapu-rapu's experience is a good picture of how calous operators are on the health and lives of people in that area.

To claim that the impending mining in payo WILL ensure sustainability... is very good. However, that will, as you said, need vigilance... there is the evil's doo, my friend.

No to mining in Catanduanes!

Dave

DEVIL'S ADVOCATE

Sweet Bikolana's picture

Playing Devil's Advocate in the interests of keeping a balanced view, I should like to invite comments any members may have on good news stories about mining anywhere in the Philippines.

Sweet Bikolana

No Evil In Here

Jorge O. Macenas's picture

First, Let emotions settle down, let hysteria lost steam and let the apolcalyptic scenarios settle down to reality before we share point of views why I'm in favor of sustainable mining of coal deposits in Catanduanes.

Let us look into the issue based on facts on hands not the imaginary sinkholes, not a fiery coal field in India, not imagined evils, not rape (Catanduanes has one of the highest rape incident in the country, let us not exacerbate it), not wiping off the map theories, not share of pennies out of trillions. All of these are designed to incite not to inform.

There is no role for devils advocate. In fact there is no evil in here.

DEVIL'S ADVOCATE

Sweet Bikolana's picture

Given that there was such a lot of negativity being expressed about mining, I felt I should try to get a more balanced view by coaxing opinions from the other side of the fence. So far there have been none.

If you are going to wait until emotions subside before imparting your views, you may have a long wait. Perhaps until Hell freezes over?

Sweet Bikolana

There is Evil in here

Dave's picture

Before those sinkholes, fiery coal fields, and other apocalyptic mining realities are the promise of technology base from facts.

For as long as corruption in the Philippines is not resolved at least to a degree where systems are respected, procedures are followed and rights are respected, facing "facts" and going down to "reality" would redound to the same sinkholes, fiery coal fields and other apocalyptic mining realities.

You will kindly note, i have not heard anyone here against mining per se. Most of those who disagree to the mining in Catanduanes is the fear that corruption will go on the way and make Catanduanes like Rapu-rapu and the rest...

There is evil in here...

Dave

Scary Sketches of the Evils of Mining

Dave's picture

Read on my fellow Catandunganons. A movement to educate our fellow Catandunganons on these evils is a MUST and should be done NOW!!

If this happens to India, I cannot stop feeling fearful with corruption in the Philippines a very real vehicle for similar disasters: trees gone, rivers gone, swamps in Viga, Payo, Bagamanoc Gone, the "honasan" teeming with whatever is left over of cyanide, bombs and other mal practices... gone too.... worst, the spectre of people of Viga, Pago and Bagamanoc being relocated and... gone too???

No to malicious greed! No to mining in Catanduanes.

Well done John...

I enjoin all Catandunganons to please post more information for us to make educated decisions!

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Mabuhay, Mabuay... Islang Catandungan!

Dave