Bauxite Mining (Sijimali)

Introduction

  • The Sijimali Bauxite Mining Project is a proposed large bauxite mine in Odisha, spread across Rayagada and Kalahandi districts in the Eastern Ghats.
  • It has become a major current-affairs issue because it combines mining policy, tribal rights, forest clearance, environmental concerns, and law-and-order tensions.

Location

  • The project lies in the Sijimali hills in Odisha.
  • Official documents place the mine in Kashipur tahsil of Rayagada district and Thuamul Rampur tehsil of Kalahandi district.
  • The area falls within a Scheduled Area, which is important for tribal-protection laws and forest-rights procedures.

Who is developing the project

  • Vedanta Limited was declared the preferred bidder for the Sijimali bauxite block in the Odisha mineral-block auction process in February 2023, and the state later issued the Letter of Intent for the mine lease.
  • The project is linked to Vedanta’s raw-material needs for its Lanjigarh alumina refinery in Odisha.

Scale of the project

  • Official documents describe Sijimali as a very large bauxite block.
  • The mine lease area is about 1,549 hectares.
  • Government and tribunal-linked records describe estimated reserves of around 311 million tonnes.
  • Vedanta has proposed a peak production capacity of 9 million tonnes per annum, while the forest-clearance portal also reflects a proposal of 6 million tonnes per annum in the application details. This difference appears to reflect different stages or filings, so the safest way to state it is that the project is a multi-million-tonne large-capacity mine.

Why the project matters economically

  • The project is important because bauxite is the key raw material for aluminium production.
  • Official records link Sijimali directly to feeding Vedanta’s alumina-refining requirements at Lanjigarh, which makes the project strategically important for the company’s aluminium value chain.

Forest land involved

  • The project involves substantial diversion of forest land.
  • The forest-clearance portal shows 723.55 hectares of forest land in one proposal view.
  • NGT-linked records on the later proposal show 708.204 hectares of forest land proposed for diversion, including land earmarked for the safety zone.
  • This is one reason the project has become highly sensitive environmentally and legally.

Environmental clearance status

  • The project requires environmental clearance under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  • On the forest portal, the status of the environmental clearance is shown as “EC under process”.
  • So, the project’s regulatory process is still not fully complete.

Forest clearance status

  • The mine has received Stage-I / in-principle forest clearance, but not final clearance.
  • NGT-linked records show that the Union environment ministry recommended Stage-I approval for diversion of forest land for the Sijimali mine in late 2025.
  • However, this is not the same as final permission to start using forest land. Stage-II clearance remains necessary after compliance with stipulated conditions.

Access road issue

  • A connected issue is the proposed access road from the hilltop mine area to State Highway-44.
  • Reporting in April 2026 said the road had only Stage-I approval and that the land cannot be transferred to the user agency until Stage-II approval is granted.
  • This road issue became the immediate trigger for recent unrest because locals view it as the operational gateway to mining.

Forest Rights Act dimension

  • The project area is in a Scheduled Area, which makes the Forest Rights Act, 2006 especially relevant.
  • The forest-clearance portal states that the process for settlement of rights under the Forest Rights Act had not been completed in the proposal details visible there.
  • This is one of the most important legal and political issues in the controversy.

Displacement concerns

  • Official project records indicate that the project involves displacement.
  • The forest portal lists 68 affected families, all identified there as Scheduled Tribe families.
  • This is central to the local resistance because the issue is not only environmental but also about livelihood, habitation, and community survival.

Why local communities are opposing it

  • Opposition from Adivasi and local communities has centered on:
    • possible displacement
    • loss of forest rights
    • damage to traditional livelihoods
    • ecological harm in the hills
    • allegations that consent procedures were not properly followed
  • These concerns have been repeatedly reported in recent coverage and rights-focused documentation.

Recent protests and clashes

  • The project saw major unrest in April 2026.
  • A clash linked to the proposed road and the mining project left around 70 people injured, including 58 police personnel, according to reporting from the time.
  • The unrest centered on the view among locals that road construction was effectively the first step toward opening up the mine.

Legal and rights controversy

  • The Sijimali issue has also moved into a broader legal and human-rights debate.
  • Business and rights trackers reported allegations of forged consent, demands for scrutiny of forest-clearance procedures, and attempts to pause or challenge the project.

Environmental significance

  • The project area lies in the Eastern Ghats, a region known for ecological sensitivity, forest cover, and dependence of local communities on natural resources.
  • Mining here raises concerns about:
    • deforestation
    • hill and watershed disturbance
    • biodiversity loss
    • long-term ecological fragmentation
  • These concerns become sharper when large forest diversion and road-building are involved.

Administrative and policy significance

  • Sijimali is important in public policy because it sits at the intersection of:
    • mineral development
    • tribal welfare
    • forest governance
    • environmental clearance
    • Scheduled Area protections
    • industrial raw-material security
  • It is a good example of the larger development-versus-rights debate in India’s mining regions.

Key issues to remember

  • The most important facts to retain are:
    • Sijimali is a large bauxite project in Odisha
    • it is linked to Vedanta
    • it lies in a Scheduled Area
    • it involves substantial forest diversion
    • Stage-I forest clearance has been granted, but final clearance is still pending
    • FRA and consent issues are central to the controversy
    • the project triggered major protests in 2026

Conclusion

  • The Sijimali bauxite mining project is one of the clearest recent examples of how mining in India can become a deeply contested issue involving economics, ecology, tribal rights, and legality.
  • Its final importance lies not only in the mineral resource itself, but in what it reveals about the challenge of balancing industrial growth with environmental safeguards and Adivasi rights.
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