Activists oppose Centre’s nod to select hydropower projects in Uttarakhand

A group of prominent persons including Rajya Sabha MP Kunwar Rewati Raman Singh and historian Ramachandra Guha write to the Union Environment Ministry.

September 10, 2021 08:04 pm | Updated September 11, 2021 01:33 pm IST - NEW DELHI

NTPC’s flood-ravaged Tapovan-Vishnugad hydel project in Uttarkhand's Chamoli district. File

NTPC’s flood-ravaged Tapovan-Vishnugad hydel project in Uttarkhand's Chamoli district. File

A group of environmentalists, historians, geologists and intellectuals have petitioned the Union Environment Ministry to recant its endorsement of seven hydroelectric power projects (HEP) in Uttarakhand.

The signatories include Kunwar Rewati Raman Singh, MP, Rajya Sabha; Justice Giridhar Malviya, Chancellor, Benares Hindu University, Ravi Chopra, chairman, Supreme Court-appointed expert body on impacts of hydro projects (2013), Shashi Shekhar, ex-Secretary, Water Resources Ministry and Ramachandra Guha, historian.

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In February, a devastating flood of rock, ice and debris gushed down the Rishiganga river in Uttarakhand and killed at least 200 and severely damaged two hydropower projects. This reignited a longstanding debate on the viability of as many as 49 hydroelectric projects in Uttarakhand. However, three Central Ministries — Power, Environment and Water Resources — who initially had divergent views on the future of hydroelectric power projects have agreed to a consensus, The Hindu reported on August 27.

According to an affidavit filed in the Supreme Court this month, seven — one of them being the 520 MW Tapovan project by the NTPC that was severely damaged this month — have been allowed to complete construction primarily on the grounds that they were over “50% complete”.

The Jal Shakti Ministry has been opposed to fresh hydropower projects on the grounds that they compromised the natural flow of the Ganga. However in 2019, they reached an agreement with the Environment and Power Ministries that some projects in an advance state of construction could continue but no more fresh projects would be allowed.

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The seven projects are the Tehri 2 (1000 MW), Tapovan Vishnugad (520 MW), Vishnugad Pipalkoti (444 MW), Singoli Bhatwari (99 MW), Phata Byung (76 MW), Madhmaheshwar (15 MW), and Kaliganga II (4.5 MW). While the February floods wiped out the Rishiganga project, the Tapovan Vishnugad project was one of those severely damaged.

In their letter, the writers note that six out of the seven projects (except Tehri Stage II) recommended, lie in para-glacial zones, or in its buffer. An expert committee constituted by the Environment Ministry to review the role of hydroelectric projects in the aftermath of the Kedarnath floods of 2013 , had highlighted the dangers of building dams in the para-glacial zone regions at an elevation of over 2200 metres from sea level).

The aftermath of the 2013 floods had clogged the Madhmaheshwar and Kaliganga rivers with sediment which were likely to get mobilised during extreme rains and cause downstream impacts on hydropower projects.

Also read | Projects above an elevation of 2,200 metres recipe for disaster, say experts

Phata-Byung and Tapovan-Vishungad “can in no way be considered as 50 per cent complete” as they had suffered extreme damage and were even now buried under debris. The environmental conditions basis which they were initially approved had entirely changed and these projects would require a fresh appraisal from the ground up, they write.

“Local reports suggest that Vishnugad-Pipalkoti construction too, is under 50% per cent. Tehri 2 HEP, if constructed, would immediately recycle the river water that emerges out of Tehri 1 dam without allowing for even a minimal stretch of flow in which the Ganga could revive herself. Studies by NEERI have found that Tehri 1 has already compromised the self-purifying property of Gangajal. Tehri 2 would only deteriorate it further,” they note.

Fresh designs and compensating for environmental damage would make these projects economically unviable “especially when compared to the cheap solar power available today.” and therefore, they add, “Given all these facts, reports and studies, it would be a profound error, indeed a self-defeating exercise, to implement any more HEPs in the Himalaya and on the Ganga, whether under construction, new or proposed.”

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