The Asian Age

Playing with God’s world: ‘Growth’ has a high price

- Sanjeev Ahluwalia The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

Senior BJP leader Uma Bharati’s first reaction to the terrible news of the Chamoli glacier break/avalanche disaster on Sunday — “I told you so” — fully aligns with the reservatio­ns of all those who put a higher value on conservati­on than on the developmen­t of natural resources for economic growth.

On Sunday, a part of the Nanda Devi glacier broke off and avalanched down, causing a flash flood in the Rishiganga and Dhauligang­a — the upper riverine stretches of the Alakananda, which feeds into the mighty Ganga — washing away back-toback dams diverting water into a privately-owned hydro project on the Rishiganga stretch and seriously damaging an under-constructi­on government­owned power generation project at Tapovan.

As minister for water resources in the first BJP government of Narendra Modi, Ms Bharati had dragged her feet on the developmen­t of the upper reaches of the Ganga in Uttarakhan­d — much to the dismay of gung-ho advocates of developmen­t and growth. Conservati­onists cite the “fragile” structure of the Himalayas to caution against overexploi­tation of the riverine system for electricit­y generation.

Others go so far as to blame the recent muchpublic­ised widening of the highways connecting the Char Dham — the four pilgrimage shrines in Garhwal — Badrinath, Kedarnath, Gangotri and Yamnotri. Constructi­on of roads is still done the old way, by simply carving additional road width out from the mountain side, causing significan­t soil erosion both above and below the road. Measures to bind the exposed mountainsi­de using nets or by planting fast-growing ground cover are only a sideshow, rarely given prominence, in already overloaded road constructi­on budgets.

But then, isn’t it always “the growth-wallahs” who stick their necks out by measuring risk versus rewards, even in the playground of the gods — as the Himalayas are believed to be. On the other hand, it is “safe” to be a conservati­onist, simply because there are so few downsides to the belief that only the sparing use of natural resources is sustainabl­e. Multiple alternativ­e sources of growth do remain unexploite­d, like higher productivi­ty in the use of existing resources or the use of alternativ­e “clean” technologi­es for power generation, like solar or offshore wind.

At times like the present one, in the immediate aftermath of a human tragedy, calculatin­g the trade-off between lives cruelly snatched away from loved ones and the potential economic gains from developmen­t seems particular­ly pointless.

It is also unclear to what extent the disaster is the outcome of over-exploitati­on of resources in the back-to-back constructi­on of dams to divert water into tunnels to run turbines for electricit­y generation. The shearing-off of glaciers, causing an avalanche and a flash flood in downstream riverine systems, is a natural calamity. After all, avalanches do happen, and lives are lost.

Doubtless, lessons must and will be learnt, with respect to continuous monitoring of the higher reaches for signs of fragility. Assessing the geological safety of hill developmen­t — extending road access, urban sprawl and related projects — is no longer a choice. Coupled with the depredatio­ns of climate change, already fragile ecosystems could tumble over the edge much faster if the rate and style of intrusive developmen­t is not carefully regulated.

How much of a say should local communitie­s have in large projects being created in their midst is another vexed question — on which there are no clear answers. The “wisdom and public interest orientatio­n” of NIMBY (not in my backyard) communitie­s varies and is often romanticis­ed. In comparison, centralise­d planning is easy to vilify as representi­ng the cruel, uncaring imposition­s of rules made by “outsiders”. Ultimately, help must come from science in guiding the government on project site selection and regulation­s for risk minimisati­on and occupation­al safety for project workers.

In 2013, PM Narendra Modi made history as chief minister of Gujarat by arranging transport for Gujarati pilgrims stranded in the Kedarnath flash floods. In a similar vein, within a day of the incident, R.K. Singh, Union minister for power, visited the damaged NTPC-owned Tapovan hydro generation project.

VIP visits are a traditiona­l, albeit a much-reviled, device for speeding up the release of funds for relief work and energising those engaged in the onerous onsite task of rescue, relief distributi­on and rehabilita­tion. But it is a tradition that a politician ignores only at his peril — after all “we are like that only”. Happily, the minister, previously a civil servant who retired as India’s home secretary — did more than just that. He was on the button when he commented that the structural safety of glacier formations around large project constructi­on sites in mountainou­s regions should be monitored for geological stress, much more so than they are done now. Early advance warnings of incipient trouble can enable the evacuation of workers, at the very least.

Adroit operationa­l steps to minimise the downstream damage also mitigated the scale of the disaster. Reportedly, emergency measures to release water stored in downstream dams at Rishikesh and Srinagar helped create the required space to absorb the upstream water shock. All these actions speak to our improving capacity for the safe operation of large water systems. To the credit of the civil administra­tion, households along the affected stretch of the river, potentiall­y under threat from flood waters, were reportedly evacuated as a precaution, though the waters subsided subsequent­ly.

National Disaster Management Authority personnel were also visibly in attendance, although it is unclear whether more boots on the ground, in an area chock-a-block with the security forces, is of additional value. The NDMA, sadly, remains a neglected cousin of the military and the police in terms of their technical capacity, rescue equipment and surge capacity for assisting the local civil authoritie­s.

The bulk of the casualties are of on-site contract workers — mostly migrants from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. Hopefully, once these two hydro projects are completed, the memories of those who laid down their lives during their completion will be commemorat­ed in a suitable manner.

The CM of Uttarakhan­d announced `4 lakhs as relief for the families of each of the victims. An additional `2 lakhs each would be given from the Prime Minister’s Relief Fund.

The question which remains unanswered, however, goes far beyond the welfare of the families of the deceased. The jury is still out on what is an acceptable societal tradeoff between the risk of mortality and morbidity and the compulsion­s of economic developmen­t.

Some go so far as to blame the recent much-publicised widening of the highways connecting the Char Dham — the four pilgrimage shrines in Garhwal

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