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Drone technology can play a significant role to check illegal mining in the country and can also used to save natural resources, Union Minister Anurag Singh Thakur said on Tuesday. The Minister for Information and Broadcasting at an event here said the Centre continues to invest in training the youth in drone technology as India is on track to become a global 'drone hub' of the world. "Mining and illegal mining are two different things. To keep a check on the illegal mining, drone technology could be used. Drone technology could be a big thing to save our resources." he said. He was making those comments at the inauguration of first drone skilling and training conference organised by Garuda Aerospace at the Agni College of Technology, Thalambur near here. Thakur recalled that drones were used during the COVID-19 pandemic to deliver medicines and vaccines. Recently, the Ministry of Civil Aviation and the Directorate General of Civil Aviation allowed the Board of Control for Cricket
In response to the recent Supreme Court order in a case of rampant illegal mining in Odisha, the central mines ministry has formed a committee to examine the existing National Mineral Policy framed in 2008. The panel has the mandate to look at the shortcomings in the prevailing policy and prepare the roadmap for a new policy.In a verdict dated August 2, the apex court disposing off a Writ Petition filed by the NGO Common Cause, had directed the Union government to have a fresh look at the almost decade old National Mineral Policy-2008 especially on the areas of conservation and development.The panel formed is headed by K Rajeswara Rao, additional secretary with the ministry of mines. This panel would have adequate representation from the ministries of forest & environment & climate change, transport & highways, coal, finance, shipping and from organisations such as Indian Bureau of Mines (IBM), Railway Board, Geological Survey of India (GSI) and Niti Aayog along with ...
Odisha may have a revenue bonanza in excess of Rs 25,000 crore in the current fiscal thanks to the Supreme Court order on illegal mining in the state.The apex court has asked the mining companies to cough up 100 per cent of the value of ore they had lifted without lawful authority since 2000-2001.The defaulting companies included some of the big names in the mining business- Tata Steel, Aditya Birla group owned Essel Mining, public sectors Steel Authority of India (SAIL), Odisha Mining Corporation, Mesco, Rungta Mines, KJS Ahluwalia, Sirajuddin Mines, Indrani Patnaik etc.Following the Shah Commission probe into illegal mining, the state government, in 2013, had issued notices in 146 cases to lease holders, most of them engaged in iron ore and manganese excavation, for recovery of illegally mined ore under section 21 (5) of the Mines and Mineral Development and Regulation (MMDR) Act. The law mandated recovery of value of such ore if the material is already sold. The total value of ...