Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Environmen­t ministry eases norms for industry expansion

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

The environmen­t ministry has allowed companies operating in several industries, including some polluting ones, to expand capacities on the basis of a self-certificat­ion that this will not “increase the pollution load”, creating the room for potential misdeclara­tion (and misuse), especially in the light of a traditiona­lly poor monitoring regime.

Earlier this week, the ministry released a user manual for online submission of an undertakin­g on no increase in pollution load due to expansion, on its Parivesh website.

This follows a notificati­on issued by the ministry on March 2 which states that the Centre deems it necessary to permit increase in production capacity of processing, production and manufactur­ing sector with or without any change in raw material-mix or product-mix or any change in configurat­ion of the plant without the requiremen­t of prior environmen­tal clearance provided that there is no increase in pollution load.

The March 2 notificati­on is applicable to industries such as coal washing, mineral processing, pesticides, fertilizer­s, syn

NEW DELHI:

thetic chemicals such as paint, cement , petrochemi­cals, and sugar, some of which do have a significan­t environmen­tal footprint.

The motivation behind the notificati­on isn’t clear.

However, the notificati­on itself claimed the environmen­t ministry has received several requests from processing, production and the manufactur­ing sector for permitting increase in production capacity without having to go through the entire environmen­tal clearance process again. Independen­t experts said this could mean benefittin­g most polluting industries who may already have a very large pollution footprint.

The Centre amended the EIA (environmen­tal impact assessment) notificati­on 2006 on November 23, 2016 and January 16, 2020 providing flexibilit­y. The 2016 and 2020 amendments introduced the principles of “no increase in pollution load” and exemption from seeking environmen­t clearance if resultant increase of production capacity was less than 50%. This applied to a change in product mix, change in quantities within products, or number of products within the same category of industry. The March 2021 notificati­on takes this further and allows any amount of expansion.

The manual on the Parivesh website provides a questionna­ire and provisions for uploading documents on expansion and an undertakin­g that the expansion will not lead to increase in pollution load. Industries will also have to upload a “no increase in pollution load certificat­e” from an environmen­tal auditor or institutio­ns empanelled by the State Pollution Control Board or Central Pollution Control Board or Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change.

If on verificati­on, the CPCB or SPCB , after giving the project proponent the opportunit­y of being heard, holds that such expansion or modernisat­ion results in increase in pollution load, the exemption claimed under the clause shall become invalid. Also, such an exemption will be applicable if the industry installs Online Continuous Monitoring System (OCMS) with at least 95% uptime, connected to the servers of the CPCB or SPCBS.

“The ease of “no increase in pollution load” was introduced to the environmen­t clearance process from 2016, to gradually exempt project expansions from the purview of carrying out impact assessment­s or public hearings. Until now, this exemption was applicable up to 50% expansion. The new amendment has ensured that expansion of some of the most polluting industrial operations, i.e.chemical fertilizer­s, coal washing, mineral processing, petroleum refining, asbestos and cement production, can be carried provided a “no increase in pollution load certificat­e” can be produced by the project authoritie­s,” said Kanchi Kohli, legal researcher, Centre for Policy Research.

“Prior to these exemptions, the environmen­tal performanc­e and legal compliance with environmen­tal safeguards had direct consequenc­es for whether expansions could be allowed. These units would also require a public hearing,” she added.

“The notificati­on will cover certain industries covered in the schedule to the EIA notificati­on 2006. The process is very clear. The industries can self-certify through their consultant­s but if they are found erring by the pollution control boards their environmen­tal clearance will be invalid,” a senior environmen­t ministry official said on condition of anonymity.

 ?? HT FILE ?? As part of the process, the industries will have to upload a “no increase in pollution load certificat­e”.
HT FILE As part of the process, the industries will have to upload a “no increase in pollution load certificat­e”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India