Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Why India may see more Sterlite-like protests

Changes to the coastal regulation zone notificati­on are silent on holding environmen­tal offenders responsibl­e

- AARTHI SRIDHAR NAVEEN NAMBOOT

Protests against Vedanta’s Sesa Sterlite Copper Smelter Plant’s expansion plans and persistent pollution of air and water sources must be examined against another impending blow to environmen­tal governance on a nationwide scale. The Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change (MOEFCC), proposes to bring about changes to the Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) notificati­on, by bringing in yet another notificati­on – the CRZ 2018. Can this law help prevent other Sterlite-like incidents?

Sterlite, which was set up in 1996, falls well outside the CRZ, a narrow 500-metre band of land meant to be regulated by a law that was first introduced in 1991 under the Environmen­t (Protection) Act, 1986. The proposed expansion plans for Sterlite depend on inputs like coke that are either imported by the neighbouri­ng port of Tuticorin or supplied (such as water from the desalinati­on plants located on the coast ). Establishm­ents under the State Industries Promotion Corporatio­n of Tamil Nadu (SIPCOT) are located on the coast for two primary reasons. One, it facilitate­s easy discharge of effluents into the coastal waters and second, proximity to port areas facilitate­s port-based industrial developmen­t.

In India, most coal-based thermal power plants gravitated close to port areas since thermal-grade coal could be imported. The CRZ law has always been attentive to the concerns of port-related establishm­ents, declaring that these were essential activities requiring the foreshore and waterfront. The spirit of the CRZ 1991 notificati­on was to ensure the ‘regulation of activities, industries and processes’ along the coast. This law was amended over 25 times, and in 2011 was completely replaced by the CRZ, 2011, which itself saw multiple amendments.

When the CRZ was first introduced, its spirit was to limit activities on the coast — only those which were essential. The initial 1991 notificati­on saw port-based activities as being essential; after all, they could not be located anywhere else in the hinterland. The notificati­on allowed constructi­on of limited facilities, infrastruc­ture and equipment which was essential for transactio­ns that take place within a port. These included storage of oil, fertiliser­s, hazardous substances and also dredging works and land reclamatio­n for erosion control. Over a period of time, a number of other activities have been declared by the ministry as being essential to the coast, which covers activities such as exploratio­n of oil and natural gas (amended on April 12, 2001), strategic and defence-related port and harbour works (amended on January 6, 2011 ) and pipelines and transmissi­on lines (amended on April 12, 2001). The spirit of limiting activities has been replaced by a spirit of opening up the coast to all.

Therefore, while industries and industrial complexes such as SIPCOT occupied the areas outside the 500m periphery, their life-links to ports continued to thrive thanks to the CRZ notificati­on’s partiality to ports. Amendments now permit desalinati­on plants and allow sewage and effluent treatment within

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India