The Supreme Court Thursday granted two weeks to Karnataka government for filing appeal against a high court decision that paved the way for resumption of iron ore mining by some firms from certain mines in the state.
The Karnataka High Court on November 16 last year had set aside the state's notification of June 29, 2018 on demarcating certain mining areas as "revenue land".
Following this, firms can now commence mining of iron ore on revenue land, which cannot be done on forest land.
A bench comprising Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justices L Nageswara Rao and Sanjiv Khanna was informed by the state government that it would be filing an appeal in the apex court against the decision of the high court.
The Supreme Court is already seized of a PIL and various interim pleas since 2009 on the mining issue in the state and had earlier said that miners cannot be allowed to mine iron ore in excess of 35 million tonnes in a year.
On Thursday it said: "The effect of the order of the High Court is that the notifications under the Karnataka Forest Act, 1963, dated August 4, 1994 and September 4, 2014, are no longer in existence.
"This, prima facie, may go in support of the claim of the lessees (mining firms) to allow them to commence mining in the leased areas."