Ganga waterway project cleared after overruling expert panel
The
Hindu
Nov.
18, 2018
Environment Ministry and
inland waterways body differed on need for clearances
India’s longest
waterway project, one terminal of which was inaugurated by Prime Minister
Narendra Modi earlier this week, was made possible only after a high-power
Committee of Ministers and senior officials from multiple Ministries overruled
the recommendations of experts appointed by the Environment Ministry. The
latter had recommended public consultations and a full-fledged environment
clearance, documents made available through the Right to Information (RTI) Act
show.
As part of the the Modi
government’s ambitious plan to make stretches of the 2,500-km-long Ganga
suitable for transporting containers, it decided to make navigable a 1,390-km
stretch of the river between Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh and Haldia in West
Bengal. The project entails construction of 3 multimodal terminals (Varanasi,
Sahibganj and Haldia); 2 intermodal terminals; 5 Roll On–Roll Off (Ro-Ro)
terminal pairs; a new navigation lock at Farakka; assured depth dredging; an
integrated vessel repair and maintenance facility; a Differential Global
Positioning System (DGPS); a River Information System (RIS); and ‘river
training’ and river conservancy works.
The ₹5,369 crore project
is partly funded by the World Bank. However, to enable container barges and
ships to carry at least 2,000 tonnes, the project requires the river bed to be
dredged to enable a minimum draft of three metres along the river, as well as
to make the river channel at least 45 metres wide.
Since early 2016, the
Union Ministry of Environment and Forests and the Inland Waterways Authority of
India (IWAI), which is attached to the Union Shipping Ministry, have been at
odds over whether this dredging required environmental clearance (EC). This is
a detailed process that involves a consultation with locals likely to be
affected by the project and residing at locations along the river, where major
constructions would be executed.
The IWAI contended that
clearance was not necessary, as the proposed terminal at Varanasi was not a
“port” and that only “maintenance dredging” was required. This activity was
required to make an existing channel suitable, and was not a greenfield,
dredging effort. Therefore, as per the existing provisions of the Environment
(Protection) Act, it was “exempt” from an environment clearance process.
The Expert Appraisal
Committee (EAC), a committee of experts constituted by the Environment Ministry
and tasked by law with recommending to the Ministry whether major
infrastructure projects ought to be given the go-ahead, differed. Such
exemptions were valid, it said, as per records of a meeting on May 18, 2017,
only if the “project had applied for a prior environmental clearance.” The
Union Environment Ministry supported the EAC’s recommendation, even arguing
that “…a terminal was part of a Port.”
However, a meeting on
October 24 between Union Shipping and Roads Minister Nitin Gadkari, Union
Environment Minister Harsh Vardhan, and senior Secretaries of the Environment,
Water and Shipping Ministries, decided that an environment clearance was not
required. This was because the EAC had not provided “cogent reasons in support
of their observations and recommendation” and that existing laws exempted
jetties and multi-modal terminals (like the one that came up in Varanasi) from
an EC process. At this meeting, too, the Union Environment Secretary C.K.
Mishra recommended that the project should apply for an EC “in view of the
involvement of dredging component.” He even offered to process the clearance on
a “fast track basis”, if applied for.
On December 21, 2017, the
Environment Ministry issued an office order agreeing that no environmental
clearance was required and approved the project for further processing by the
Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs, with some “environmental safety
measures.”
Being a World Bank funded
project, it was necessary for approvals to be in place before December 31.
“There are several
ecological threats from such dredging in the river bed and we have now a major
project that was commissioned without an environment clearance,” said Shripad
Dharmadhikary, Coordinator of Manthan Adhyayan Kendra (MAK), a group engaged in
analysis and advocacy on water and energy issues. The MAK had sourced these
proceedings via the RTI and shared them with The Hindu.
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