CM Majhi Marks 2 Years of Mining Reforms in Odisha
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Odisha Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi on Wednesday, 15 July 2026 highlighted his government's two-year record in the Steel and Mines sector, citing mineral production gains, technology-driven governance and community investment as pillars of what he called a Samruddha Odisha (Prosperous Odisha).
Context
Posting under the hashtags #2YearsofLokankaSarakar (Two Years of the People's Government) and #BikasharaDharaOdishaSara, CM Majhi framed the milestone as a break from the past. The BJP swept to power in Odisha in June 2024, ending 24 years of Biju Janata Dal rule, and immediately pledged transparent mining governance and a larger share of mineral revenues for local communities.
In his post, the Chief Minister stated: 'By ensuring transparent resource management while investing in education, healthcare and community development, every initiative is creating sustainable growth and greater prosperity for the people.' The message was accompanied by a video released by his office.
Policy Backdrop
Odisha is one of India's most mineral-rich states, holding significant deposits of iron ore, bauxite, coal and chromite. The Steel and Mines Department oversees mineral leases, production oversight and regulatory compliance across these sectors.
The government's stated approach — record production alongside responsible extraction — fits within a broader national shift that began with the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Amendment Act of 2015. That law mandated technology-enabled lease auctions and established District Mineral Foundations (DMFs) to channel a portion of mining royalties directly into welfare and infrastructure spending in affected districts.
Odisha's reforms mirror similar trajectories in neighbouring mineral-producing states such as Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh, where linking extraction revenue to local development has become a governance benchmark.
Stakeholders and Impact
The communities most directly affected by mining policy in Odisha are those in mineral-belt districts, where tribal populations have historically borne the environmental and social costs of large-scale extraction. The government's emphasis on education, healthcare and community development spending signals an intent to direct DMF and royalty revenues toward these groups.
For the steel industry — a major downstream consumer of Odisha's iron ore and coal — stable, transparent lease management reduces supply uncertainty. The state's mining output also feeds into national steel production targets, giving the reforms significance beyond Odisha's borders.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to the state's next annual mining report and any updated District Mineral Foundation guidelines expected during the 2026-27 budget session. Concrete production figures and technology rollout timelines, once officially published, will allow independent assessment of whether the two-year record matches the government's claims.
As CM Majhi positions responsible mining as central to Odisha's development identity, the pressure to back political messaging with auditable data will only grow — particularly from tribal rights groups and opposition parties watching the sector closely.