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Justin Guay

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India to USA: 'Coal-Gate' is Everywhere

Posted: 08/31/2012 11:28 am

Co-authored by Ashish Fernandes, Greenpeace India and Chaitanya Kumar, 350 India

A $33 billion 'Coal-Gate' scandal is rocking the Indian government. This 'mother of all scams' created a windfall for private developers who secured public resources at rock bottom prices. As a beleaguered Prime Minister Singh takes to defending this egregious allocation of public resources it's important to recognize that coal gate isn't just happening in India. It's happening everywhere, including the USA, and it must be stopped.

It's important to understand just how big of a deal this scam is in India. If there is one thing average Indian citizens hate its corruption. That's because scandal after scandal (from the Indo-US nuclear deal to 2-G) has beset the Indian gov't. It's what helped propel Anna Hazare and his movement to global fame and rallied an apathetic middle class to action. Then came coal-gate.

The report which broke the scandal essentially details how the government gave away public assets (coal deposits for less than $3/ton and lots and lots of excess land) to private companies through a 'no-bid' process. They basically gave away public resources to private companies under the guise of the 'public interest'. The deposits also happen to lie under India's remaining forests that are home to endangered species (including the nearly extinct tiger) and tribal communities. These forests must be razed to get at the coal beneath them - an unacceptable attack on species protection, inclusive growth, social justice and the climate.

But you know where else this epic scandal occurs? The Western public lands in the Powder River Basin in the United States. Just a few months back environmental groups sent a letter to the US Bureau of Land Management requesting that they cease 'auctioning' public assets to a single bidder. The scale of this coal scam is 'only' $28.9 billion. So the US coal-gate is only a few billion dollars less corrupt than India's. But who's counting?

The truth is however, that what we do here in the USA is worse. We consider an auction to consist of one participant - who ends up getting public resources at a firesale price of $1 per ton (which they turn around and sell to our Indian friends at prices as high as $100/ton). Indians at least sold coal for $3/ton and were honest enough to not call it a 'bidding process.' We on the other hand call it bidding and sell it for less. Which is the bigger scam? Who cares, in both countries the public is getting screwed.

But here's the rub, India's coal-gate is still unfolding. The report named the beneficiaries of the scam who were a veritable who's who in the Indian corporate world. From the infamous Ambani owned Reliance, to 'good-neighbor' Tata, to the Adani's and their record of legal violations household corporate names received these public gifts.

Sometimes these corporate houses even received U.S. financial support for coal gate tainted projects. For instance the 4,000 MW Reliance developed Sasan coal plant was funded by the US Ex Im Bank and received $5 billion in undue profit as a part of coal-gate. Something the US Ex Im due diligence unsurprisingly failed to show. But for Ex Im Bank that's neither here nor there - it's actually everywhere.

US involvement aside, Tata, Reliance, and Adani are in the midst of an even more brazen scam. Despite receiving land and coal for next to nothing as hundreds of millions suffered in the great Indian blackout they were not busy building projects and delivering power, they were busy publicly decrying 'environmental hurdles' and bureaucratic delay as the cause of the coal crisis. The sheer gall it took to stand in public and make these claims is jaw dropping but it's not even the tip of the iceberg.

While they were busy attempting to gut all environmental standards and clearances when it came to mining (not to mention further privatize coal mining and thereby further enrich themselves) these same companies were busy seeking a bailout for 'flagship' projects like Tata Mundra and Krishnapatnam.

But why would 'dirt cheap coal' need a bailout? Because cheap coal is dead which breaks this dirty fuels 'social contract' but not apparently its financial contract. Which is why Tata, Reliance, and Adani desperately need a tariff revision so they can raise rates on average citizens, and keep their profits up.

So as the coal-gate scam explodes they are asking for a bailout. The political timing would be laughable if regulators were prepared to stand up for the common man, not the industry. Instead, just like Prime Minister Singh, they are falling in line to defend these 'barons of industry' by securing their requested bailout.

So from India to the US average citizens are getting screwed by the coal industry coming and going. They give these corporations their public assets for fire sale prices, then they let them raise their rates when they make bad business decisions. All the while we get sick from the pollution while the carbon burns our planet. Where's Anna when you need him?

Our Indian friends and colleagues are rightly angry. Really angry. On the 10th of November, thousands of people will come together for a day of action across India protest dependence on coal and highlight the decentralized alternate energy solutions already available. Mr. Singh, and Congress, should be very worried.

But here in the US we continue to auction off not just coal leases but oil and gas at next to nothing. The fire sale must stop, but better yet, we must keep it in the ground entirely. No time better than the present, and no resources better than coal. It's time we ended coal-gate.

 

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Co-authored by Ashish Fernandes, Greenpeace India and Chaitanya Kumar, 350 India A $33 billion 'Coal-Gate' scandal is rocking the Indian government. This 'mother of all scams' created a windfall for ...
Co-authored by Ashish Fernandes, Greenpeace India and Chaitanya Kumar, 350 India A $33 billion 'Coal-Gate' scandal is rocking the Indian government. This 'mother of all scams' created a windfall for ...
 
 
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John P Miller
Historian, Truthseeker
06:38 PM on 09/03/2012
Uncles on one side of my family were coal miners. Two of the them died of Black Lung. They
had to fight insurance co. who wanted to drop coverage. My grandfather's hometown was above
a coalmine although most did not know that when they bought their houses. When the timbers
holding up the mine walls began to rot in the 1970s, most of the town's homes began to sink
& were condemned. By that time, the coal company responsible was out of business. Most
of my relatives lost everything. This was the legacy of coal for my family.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Egalitare
05:00 PM on 09/03/2012
I hope November 10 is a huge and successful beginning.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
02:17 AM on 09/03/2012
I'm for some deglobalization, here. US coal for US power plants to make energy for US businesses and homes. India needs to figure out their own situation on energy. Many hands make light work, they could install the solar panels and windmills tomorrow if they had the parts and the money.
John P Miller
Historian, Truthseeker
06:46 PM on 09/03/2012
Keep in mind that though they advertise now as having clean coal energy, there is no such thing.
I still have relatives who are descendants of coal miners who live in the areas of PA that once
had mines, but now they are using shale. They have a plant nearby that takes the shale &
converts it to ready to use fuel. However, they must vent at times in the process. If my relatives
have wash on the line drying when this venting takes place, the wash turns black. Imagine
what that does to a person breathing it.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
09:19 PM on 09/02/2012
rooftop pv solar is cheaper. India is perfect for solar.

A single 3kw solar panel will produce more electric that a 110 ton rail car of coal.

The solar panel is recycled forever.

No contest.
12:52 PM on 09/01/2012
Thanks Justin--In Colorado, the BLM just (8/22/12) just leased premium Colorado coal (above 12,000 BTU/pound) coal for 25 cents/ton in the Sage Creek coal lease.

See http://www.denverpost.com/colorado/ci_21377672/lease-coal-tract-nw-colo-goes-800-000

Leslie Glustrom
303-245-8637
Boulder, Colorado
04:30 AM on 09/01/2012
Under India's ruling Congress Party, the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.
photo
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Luuke
06:07 AM on 09/04/2012
Its the rich get richer and everyone else gets corrupt
05:25 PM on 08/31/2012
And as far the coal-gate 'scam' is concerned, many in the country tend to suffer from selective amnesia.. Power in India for the domestic consumer is subsidised (or rather cross-subsidised with the industries bearing the brunt) so if the coal were to be sold in an open market auction the power generation companies would never be able to sustain profitable operations thus providing a disincentive to them for investing in the sector.. In such a scenario, the only solution for the govt. (which is already in the midst of tackling a fairly huge fiscal deficit) would be to pay for power from its own coffers... This would only lead to an emulation of the muck that has been created in the downstream oil industry in India...
04:49 PM on 08/31/2012
You have conveniently portrayed the Indian public as a victim of corruption when the fact of the matter is that it is a party to corruption... 'environmental hurdles' and 'bureaucratic delays' are a reality in India.. The plurality of our politics surpasses (in a negative sense) that of the U.S. as a consequence of the numerous political parties that we have.. So any decision making process is, in fact, painstakingly slow in India as dissidence from even the smallest of factions in political circles can hamper the adoption/ enactment of policy decisions...
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Freenation
02:33 PM on 08/31/2012
Very well researched article...