Infogyaan

JSW–POSCO Steel Plant Faces Strong Protest by JPM and Locals in Keonjhar

JSW–POSCO Steel Plant Faces Strong Protest by JPM and Locals in Keonjhar

Keonjhar, Odisha — A strong wave of protest has risen in Odisha’s Keonjhar district over the announcement of a large steel plant by JSW Group and South Korea’s POSCO. The main groups leading the resistance are Jindal Pratirodh Sangram Samiti (JPM), along with the well-known POSCO Pratirodh Sangram Samiti (PPSS) and Lok Shakti Abhiyan.

JSW–POSCO Steel Plant Faces Strong Protest by JPM and Locals in Keonjhar

What’s Happening in Keonjhar

At a press meet in August 2025, Odisha Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi revealed that JSW and POSCO will jointly build a 6 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) green-field steel plant in Keonjhar’s Patna region—his home district. He said it would bring industrial growth, improve infrastructure, and generate many jobs.

Who Is Protesting?

Why Locals Are Worried

Many residents of Keonjhar—especially small farmers and betel vine growers—fear losing their lands to the project. These lands are not only their source of income but also culturally significant. They recall how earlier projects failed to deliver promised benefits.

Similar protests in Dhinkia (Jagatsinghpur) ended only when POSCO withdrew in March 2017, following over a decade of resistance. JPM, PPSS, and other movements remain wary of similar outcomes repeating.

Tension Builds at Protest Sites

On several occasions, large public protests have turned tense. A notable YouTube video shows crowds in Keonjhar shouting, “We’ll die but won’t leave our land,” signaling the depth of their resolve.

The protests remain largely peaceful so far, but heightened police presence and the legacy of past confrontations mean there is anxiety that things could escalate.

Conflicting Visions of Development

Supporters of the project, including the state government, say the plant will transform Patna in Keonjhar into a major industrial hub—similar to Rourkela—with improved infrastructure and widespread job opportunities.

Opponents argue that these benefits are uncertain. They emphasize the environmental risks, lack of full legal clearances, and insufficient consultation with local communities—concerns that shaped earlier protests in Jagatsinghpur.

What Happens Next?

The next few weeks are crucial. If the state and companies engage openly with JPM, PPSS, and community representatives—ensuring fair compensation, rehabilitation planning, and legal clarity—the project might proceed with more acceptance.

But if authorities ignore local voices and push land acquisition forcefully, the protests could grow more intense—mirroring earlier movements that successfully stalled industrial plans.

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