Coal Mining in Odisha May Spell Disaster for Elephants, WII Warns

A recent study by the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) has raised serious environmental concerns, warning that proposed expansion of coal mining in Odisha could devastate elephant habitats and exacerbate human‑elephant conflict.

🌳 Critical Corridors at Risk

Odisha’s western forest landscapes form part of a vital elephant corridor extending into Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand. The WII cautions that diverting forest land for coal blocks in regions like Angul, Sundergarh, and Keonjhar would disrupt these migration routes, likely forcing elephants into human settlements

Lost Habitats, Declining Populations

Studies show dramatic declines in elephant numbers — from 112 to just 40 in Keonjhar between 2002 and 2017 — primarily due to rampant mining and habitat encroachment  Over the past decade, Odisha has lost 857 elephants, with many deaths attributed to mining-driven habitat loss

Skyrocketing Conflicts & Fatalities

Elephants, deprived of food and safe passage, increasingly enter villages, leading to more violent encounters and casualties. From April 2014 to January 2022, Odisha saw 1,145 human–elephant conflict incidents, resulting in 730 human deaths Experts warn that these numbers could reach new highs without decisive action .

Reddit voices echo local alarm:

“The correlation is actually with deforestation and mining lol” 
“Conservationists have expressed deep concern over 
 electrocution-induced elephant deaths in Odisha”

Call for Action

WII and government panels urge Odisha to urgently develop wildlife management plans tailored to mining zones. These plans must include environmental impact assessments, protection of elephant corridors, and restoration of degraded forest cover


The Bottom Line: Coal mining boom in Odisha threatens to fracture elephant habitats, round-the-clock corridors, and fuel a surge in deadly human–elephant clashes. Experts implore Odisha and national authorities to align mining approvals with stringent conservation strategies—or risk catastrophic losses for both people and wildlife.