In March 2021, Mongabay India published a story on how the village of Pissurlem in northeast Goa, which had plentiful water resources, had now become entirely dependent on government tankers.
Pissurlem is one of many villages affected by iron-ore mining in Goa’s eastern belt. The once self-sufficient, water-rich villages have been sucked dry. As a result, they are now completely dependent on an external, erratic supply of water by tankers and piped connections.
Via the story, journalist Supriya Vohra unravels the socioeconomic and environmental connections associated with mining. On the one hand, opencast iron ore mining reduces the groundwater table and causes surface water pollution. On the other, villages, like Pissurlem, are entirely dependent on tankers provided by the mining companies and the government, and piped water connections that do not reach every household.
“The linkage between the environment and people’s lives is something that Mongabay India keenly explores in its stories,” Mongabay India production editor Aditi Tandon, says. “This particular story was important, given that Goa has had a long and complicated history with mining and the consequences of mining are now showing up in the everyday lives of people. Despite being halted in the state, iron ore mining’s long term impacts are being felt in villages such as Pissurlem which were once self-sufficient, water-rich villages.”
