Published on: February 7, 2026
ILLEGAL RAT HOLE MINING
ILLEGAL RAT HOLE MINING
NEWS: An explosion in an illegal rat-hole coal mine in Meghalaya (East Jaintia Hills district) has killed 18 miners. The blast was likely caused by dynamite, trapping workers deep inside the mine.
Rat-hole mining
A primitive and hazardous mining method
- Narrow horizontal tunnels (3–4 feet high)
- Workers squat or crawl to extract coal
- Mostly unscientific, unsafe, and unregulated
Prevalent in Meghalaya
- Coal seams are thin and scattered
- Land ownership lies with individuals & clans
- Provides quick daily wages (₹2,000+), attracting poor workers
Legal status of coal mining in Meghalaya
- In April 2014, the National Green Tribunal (NGT):
- Banned rat-hole mining
- Banned transportation of illegally mined coal
- Ban was later upheld by the Supreme Court of India
Concerns
- Groundwater pollution
- Destruction of fragile hill ecosystems
- Exploitation of migrant labour (often from Assam)
- Poor workers forced to choose income Failure of regulatory enforcement
- Conflict between customary land rights and environmental law over safety
