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Coal ministry approaches environment ministry for inclusion of 5 coal mine pit lakes in Ramsar List Coal
Image credit: Wikimedia Commons

Coal ministry approaches environment ministry for inclusion of 5 coal mine pit lakes in Ramsar List

India Blooms News Service | @indiablooms | 30 Jun 2022, 09:49 pm

New Delhi:  Coal India Ltd (CIL) has undertaken– Conservation of coal mine pit lakes, maintenance of the ecological character of wetlands and inclusion of such pit lakes in the prestigious Ramsar List with the help of state governments and the Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change (MoEFCC), the Ministry of Coal said.

This is part of the initiatives towards adopting the path of sustainable development with emphasis on care for the environment and a host of measures to protect forests and biodiversity, it added.

The suitability of coal mine pit lakes for inclusion in the Ramsar List was discussed with MoEFCC, the nodal Ministry for identification of wetlands for placing on the Ramsar List, the ministry said Wednesday.

As per the guidance of MoEFCC, CIL has identified five pit lakes in the States of West Bengal, Odisha, Jharkhand, and Madhya Pradesh for consideration of including in the Ramsar list.

CIL is in process of preparing the Ramsar Information Sheet (RIS). These mine pit water bodies are regularly visited by different species of birds and also have an avifauna population.

The environment around these water bodies has ameliorated due to the efforts of CIL through a large-scale plantation and other soil moisture conservation activities.

Furthermore, the Ministry of Coal is obtaining support and assistance from the World Bank, GIZ and other global institutions for repurposing abandoned mine sites to make them safe, environmentally stable and suitable for appropriate commercial usage.

Reclaimed lands will be repurposed for economic usage such as solar parks, tourism, sports, forestry, agriculture, horticulture, townships etc.

The vast experience of these institutions in handling mine closure cases in different countries will be highly beneficial and will facilitate the adoption of best global practices in the repurposing of Indian coal mine sites. 
 

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