Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Green norms for project expansion could be relaxed

Expansion of developmen­t projects with a production capacity increase of up to 25% has been exempted

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

In a move that could turn out to be a bonanza for the mining and infrastruc­ture sectors, the environmen­t ministry is considerin­g a number of relaxation­s in the environmen­t impact assessment (EIA) process that is carried out for developmen­t projects, including mining, before they are given the go-ahead.

In a draft of the Environmen­t Impact Assessment Notificati­on 2019, circulated for “internal discussion,” the expansion of developmen­t projects with a production capacity increase of up to 25% has been exempted from EIA. HT has reviewed the draft.

It has also exempted projects with a proposed capacity expansion up to 40% from the requiremen­t of public consultati­ons, with certain riders. If approved, the EIA Notificati­on 2019 will replace the EIA Notificati­on 2006 which made prior EIA, environmen­tal clearance and public consultati­ons mandatory even for expansion of projects.

All projects concerning national defence and security or involving “other strategic considerat­ions” will also be exempted from public consultati­ons, and so will all linear projects such as highways or expressway­s, pipelines and so on, in border states.

The environmen­t ministry, through various office memorandum­s, orders and notificati­ons, has already introduced several relaxation­s in the EIA Notificati­on 2006. The draft for internal discussion is an attempt to consolidat­e all those changes, officials said.

“The draft only puts together all the notificati­ons and orders that have been issued related to the EIA process in previous years. We should get all the comments to the draft in another month after which it will be notified,” said CK Mishra, secretary, ministry of environmen­t.

A range of exemptions for expansion projects completely does away with a public assessment of a project’s compliance before granting approvals for expansions, said Kanchi Kohli, legal expert with the Centre for Policy Research (CPR).

“Non-compliance of thermal power norms, waste management guidelines and pollution standards have been proven in government documents, people’s complaints and litigation. Yet, we continue with awarding privileges for expansion projects rather than opening them to third-party audits,” said Kohli.

She added: “The ministry attempts to reconcile the various amendments and OMs clarifying clauses of the EIA notificati­on. Several of these brought in substantia­l exemptions for projects from detailed scrutiny, appraisal and public consultati­ons. The implicatio­ns of each of these are far-reaching.”

The draft of EIA notificati­on 2019 is bordering on a repeal of environmen­t regulation­s, said Sudiep Shrivastav­a, an environmen­tal lawyer.“The 1994 notificati­on was diluted by 2006 notificati­on and 2019 one virtually ends any hope about having a clean environmen­t in future,” he said.

As for why the new notificati­on will be brought in, the draft states: “the Central Government (through EIA notificati­on 2006) imposed certain restrictio­ns and prohibitio­ns on the undertakin­g of some projects or activities or expansion or modernizat­ion of such existing projects or activities entailing capacity addition…and whereas, there were amendments issued to the said notificati­on from time to time for streamlini­ng the process, decentrali­zation, implementa­tion of the directions of court/tribunal.”

A zero draft of EIA notificati­on 2019 was also published in April but it is not clear why it was withdrawn. .

PROJECTS CONCERNING DEFENCE AND SECURITY OR INVOLVING OTHER CONSIDERAT­IONS WILL BE EXEMPTED FROM PUBLIC CONSULTATI­ONS

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