JRDA | Jharia Master Plan
Revised Jharia Master Plan (2025)

Jharia Master Plan

Access the approved plan documents and a clear, policy‑ready summary of the Revised Jharia Master Plan (2025): coverage, funding (₹5,940.47 crore approved outlay), rehabilitation entitlements, infrastructure, social support, and environmental management.

PDF Viewer

Jharia Master Plan 2009

Opens within the page. If the viewer does not load, use the download link below.

📄 Download PDF

PDF Viewer

Revised Jharia Master Plan 2025

Opens within the page. If the viewer does not load, use the download link below.

📄 Download PDF

Key Features of the Revised Jharia Master Plan (2025)

1. Scope of Coverage

  • Applicable to 81 most vulnerable sites (7 Mineable + 74 Non‑Mineable) and 27 NRSC‑identified fire sites in Jharia Coalfield.
  • Covers rehabilitation of 15,080 families:
    • 649 BCCL families
    • 1,130 LTH (Legal Title Holder) families (subject to verification)
    • 13,301 Non‑LTH families

2. Institutional Mechanism

  • Restructured JRDA with Monitoring & Implementing Committees.
  • Coal India Ltd. (CIL) empowered to implement fire‑control and make financial re‑appropriations.
  • BCCL to handle fire‑dealing in mineable sites.

3. Funding in Revised JMP (2025)

  • Total Initial Phase Outlay (Approved): ₹5,940.47 crore
  • Source of Funding:
    • Drawn from the balance of ₹6,663.02 crore available with CIL from the 2009 Jharia & Raniganj Master Plan.
    • In addition, CIL will contribute ₹500 crore per year (plus interest earned) for continuity.
  • Other inflows:
    • Revenues from mineable sites → kept in escrow for rehabilitation.
    • DMF funds (District Mineral Foundation) → used as supplementary support.

4. Rehabilitation Package

A. Compensation for LTH (Legal Title Holder) Families

These are families with legal ownership documents for their land and homestead.

  • Land & Asset Compensation: As per LARR Act, 2013 or CBA Act.
  • Housing Option:
    • One 50 m² house, or
    • ₹5 lakh cash compensation (DBT to beneficiary).
  • Livelihood Support:
    • ₹1 lakh livelihood grant (two instalments)
    • Loan facility up to ₹3 lakh through credit pipeline
  • Rental Assistance: ₹1 lakh (two instalments for one year’s rent)
  • Shifting Assistance: ₹50,000 one‑time

B. Compensation for Non‑LTH Families

These are families without legal land ownership, but residing in the affected area.

  • Housing Option:
    • One 38.92 m² house, or
    • ₹5 lakh cash compensation
  • Livelihood Support:
    • ₹1 lakh livelihood grant (two instalments)
    • Loan facility up to ₹3 lakh
  • Rental Assistance: ₹1 lakh (two instalments for one year’s rent)
  • Shifting Assistance: ₹50,000 one‑time
Key Principles:
  • Choice‑based: House first; cash after housing stock is exhausted.
  • Ownership Security: Long‑term lease rights for allotted houses.
  • Uniformity: Comparable benefits; land compensation applies only to LTH.
  • DBT: All cash components via Direct Benefit Transfer.

5. Infrastructure & Amenities

  • Resettlement colonies to include:
    • Schools, hospitals, community centres
    • Water pipelines, sewerage, street lighting, electricity connections
    • Waste management, roads, and transport links
  • Belgaria Township to be upgraded and eventually notified as a municipal body.

6. Social Support Measures

  • Skill development programmes and micro‑enterprise promotion for affected families.
  • Coverage under pensions, insurance (PMJJBY, PMSBY, APY), and Ayushman Bharat.
  • Support for Self‑Help Groups (SHGs) and cooperatives (e.g., bamboo craft, e‑rickshaw cooperatives).

7. Fire & Land Management

  • 27 fire‑affected sites to be tackled by BCCL in a time‑bound manner.
  • Scientific monitoring using satellite imagery, drones, and AI‑based tools.
  • Vacated sites to be ecologically restored (plantation, stabilization, sustainable land use).
  • JRDA to be given legal powers to enforce rehabilitation and prevent encroachment.

Benefits of the Revised Jharia Master Plan

For Communities

  • Relocation of 15,080 families from high‑risk zones to safe, serviced housing.
  • Ownership rights under long‑term lease.
  • Improved living conditions: schools, hospitals, electricity, piped water.
  • Financial security via compensation, livelihood grants, rent support, insurance.
  • Employment through skill development and SHG enterprises.

For the State & Nation

  • Safety of human lives in fire‑affected areas.
  • Preservation of coking coal reserves; reduced loss from fires.
  • Long‑term savings from reduced fire damage.
  • Strengthened institutional capacity with restructured JRDA and oversight.

For the Environment

  • Reduced air pollution and subsidence risk from underground fires.
  • Ecological restoration of vacated sites.
  • Sustainable development model integrating rehabilitation with safeguards.

Tip: Update the PDF src paths to your server locations before publishing.


Last updated: 6 October 2025 • Secretariat: JRDA, Dhanbad

Last updated: 29 September 2025 • Secretariat: JRDA, Dhanbad