💥UPSC 2026, 2027 UAP Mentorship September Batch

Nuclear Energy

[22nd September 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: Uranium unrest: On uranium mining in Meghalaya

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2018] Policy contradictions among various competing sectors and stakeholders have resulted in inadequate ‘protection and prevention of degradation’ to the environment. Comment with relevant illustration

Linkage: The uranium mining push in Meghalaya illustrates a clear policy contradiction, India’s strategic and energy security imperatives versus constitutional safeguards for Scheduled/Tribal Areas and environmental sustainability. The Centre’s OM exempting uranium from public consultation shows how national security priorities often override local consent and ecological concerns, leading to inadequate protection. Thus, it serves as a live illustration of competing sectoral interests producing environmental degradation risks.

Mentor’s Comment

India’s renewed push for uranium mining in Meghalaya, despite strong tribal opposition, has reopened debates on resource governance, environmental justice, and constitutional safeguards. For UPSC aspirants, this case is not only about Meghalaya but about how India manages its uranium reserves, balances national security with sustainability, and navigates the tensions between state imperatives and community consent. This article integrates the editorial’s concerns with a broader analysis of uranium mining in India and its implications.

Introduction

The Union Environment Ministry’s office memorandum (OM) exempting uranium and other strategic minerals from public consultation has intensified unrest in Meghalaya. Tribal Khasi groups, opposing uranium extraction since the 1980s, see this as a denial of their constitutional and cultural rights. At the same time, India’s nuclear ambitions make uranium strategically vital. This tension between energy security and indigenous consent places India at a crucial crossroads of democratic governance and resource management.

Why is this in the news?

The Centre’s attempt to mine uranium in Meghalaya, against the backdrop of decades-long opposition, is a landmark moment in India’s mineral politics. For the first time, an executive order (OM) has bypassed community consultations for uranium mining. Given the toxic environmental footprint of uranium mining and its irreversible impact on tribal lands, the issue has become both a governance crisis and an ecological flashpoint.

What is the history of uranium mining resistance in Meghalaya?

  1. Khasi opposition since the 1980s: Resistance in Domiasiat and Wahkaji has endured for four decades.
  2. Distrust from Jharkhand experience: Singhbhum mines faced protests due to radiation exposure and livelihood loss.
  3. Procedural unfairness: Hearings often conducted in unfamiliar languages, ignoring objections.

Why is the new Office Memorandum controversial?

  1. Exempts strategic mineral mining from public consultation, silencing affected communities.
  2. Issued without parliamentary scrutiny, showing executive overreach.
  3. Weakens constitutional safeguards, turning stewards of the land into bystanders in decisions affecting their survival.

What constitutional and legal protections are at stake?

  1. Sixth Schedule: Khasi Hills Autonomous District Council may invoke its autonomy.
  2. Judicial precedents: Niyamgiri (2013) recognized the primacy of tribal consent.
  3. Fifth and Sixth Schedules: Provide a strong legal basis for resistance.
  4. Global principle of FPIC (Free, Prior, and Informed Consent): Ignored in this decision.

Why is uranium mining a risky proposition?

  1. Environmental hazards: Radioactive waste and contamination of water sources.
  2. Human health risks: Increased cases of radiation-linked illnesses reported in Singhbhum.
  3. Cultural disruption: Tribal communities lose ancestral land and cultural heritage.
  4. Short-term security vs long-term sustainability: Overemphasis on uranium undermines renewable energy pathways.

Uranium Mining in India – An Overview

Where is uranium mined in India?

  1. Jharkhand (Singhbhum district): Oldest uranium mines; key hub of Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL).
  2. Andhra Pradesh (Tummalapalle, Kadapa district): Estimated to be one of the world’s largest uranium reserves (~150,000 tonnes).
  3. Telangana (Nalgonda district): Lambapur-Peddagattu reserves.
  4. Meghalaya (Domiasiat, Wahkaji): Rich reserves but stalled due to tribal opposition.
  5. Rajasthan (Rohil in Sikar district): Exploratory work underway.

What are the requirements and process of uranium mining?

  1. Requirement of Environmental Clearances: Normally includes public consultation, impact assessments, and Forest Rights Act compliance (bypassed in the new OM).
  2. Mining process:
    • Open-cast mining: Surface excavation, highly polluting.
    • Underground mining: Safer but expensive.
    • Processing: Crushing ore, followed by leaching (acid/alkaline) to extract uranium oxide (yellowcake).
    • Radiation management: Requires robust safeguards in waste disposal, tailing ponds, and worker protection—areas where India has faced criticism.

India’s standing in global uranium context

  1. Global reserves: Australia, Kazakhstan, Canada, Russia dominate.
  2. India’s share: About 1-2% of world reserves, modest compared to global leaders.
  3. Import dependence: Despite domestic efforts, India imports uranium from Kazakhstan, Russia, Uzbekistan, Canada.
  4. Nuclear energy contribution: Currently ~3% of India’s electricity; goal is 9-10% by 2040.

Implications for India

  1. Energy security: Indigenous uranium critical for India’s nuclear power expansion under India’s three-stage nuclear program.
  2. Geopolitical leverage: Imports expose India to supply shocks and diplomatic constraints.
  3. Environmental justice: Mining projects risk alienating tribal populations and worsening ecological fragility.

How should the state respond?

  1. Withdraw the OM to restore procedural legitimacy.
  2. Respect community consent to prevent democratic erosion.
  3. Explore alternatives like thorium-based nuclear energy (where India has rich reserves) and renewable energy strategies.
  4. Promote dialogue, not coercion, to avoid long-term alienation of tribal groups.

Conclusion

The uranium debate in Meghalaya is about much more than mining, it is about the soul of Indian democracy. By sidelining constitutional protections and environmental concerns, the state risks sacrificing long-term legitimacy for short-term gains. India’s future energy security cannot come at the cost of tribal survival, ecological stability, and democratic consent. A sustainable pathway lies in inclusive governance, diversified energy strategies, and respect for constitutional safeguards.

Get an IAS/IPS ranker as your 1: 1 personal mentor for UPSC 2024

Attend Now

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

JOIN THE COMMUNITY

Join us across Social Media platforms.