Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

A year after poisonous gas leak, villagers near the Vizag plant continue to live in fear

- Srinivasa Rao Apparasu

HYDERABAD: A year on since Visakhapat­nam in Andhra Pradesh woke up to one of its worst environmen­tal disasters – leakage of poisonous gas from a storage tank of LG Polymers Ltd, a South Korean company on the outskirts of the city, killed 12 people while nearly 500 were hospitalis­ed – villagers settled near the plant continue to live in fear.

Though the plant has since been closed following orders from the Andhra Pradesh high court, residents of Venkatapur­am and four other villages surroundin­g the plant said the horror from the tragic incident haunt them to this day.

On May 7 last year, poisonous Styrene gas leaked from one of the tanks at LG Polymers Ltd due to sudden rise in temperatur­e at the bottom of the tank at around 3.30 am. The gas slowly spread over a radius of 3km, affecting five villages — Venkatapur­am, Venkatadri Nagar, Nandamuri Nagar, Pydimamba Colony and BC & SC Colony.

Srinu Yadav, a transport worker from Venkatapur­am, said the incident had created havoc in the lives of several villagers, particular­ly the poor and the middle class.

“Many in these villages, particular­ly Venkatapur­am, where the LG Polymers plant is located, continue to face health issues, like breathing problems, asthma, and gastrointe­stinal issues,” Yadav said.

The villagers recall how thanks to the timely alert from locals, the authoritie­s of Greater Visakhapat­nam Municipal Corporatio­n

and the district administra­tion swung into action and shifted people from the affected areas with the help of police.

The Jagan Mohan Reddy government paid ex gratia of ₹1 crore each to the families of the 12 who died in the incident, besides ₹10 lakh for persons who were kept on ventilator, ₹1 lakh each to 485 people who were hospitalis­ed with serious complicati­ons and ₹25,000 each to 99 people who were treated as outpatient­s. Another 19,893 people were paid ₹25,000 each towards compensati­on.

“In the next one week, three others from the affected villages died but the authoritie­s attributed their deaths to some other reasons. In the last one year, at least 15 people, including my father-in-law, died due to symptoms that surfaced after the Styrene gas leak. But no forensic studies were done to prove they were related to the gas leak tragedy,” Yadav said.

An eight-member expert committee headed by state special chief secretary (environmen­t and forests) Neerabh Kumar Prasad, which was constitute­d to probe into the mishap, came up with a series of suggestion­s, including periodical testing of health conditions of villagers in the area so as to monitor the short-term and long-term impact of the Styrene gas on their health.

“Subsequent­ly, a committee of health experts was appointed to regularly monitor the health of people in the affected villages, but it did not commence its work because of the Covid-19 pandemic,” K Kumara Mangalam, a local trade union leader, said.

He added that the government has washed off its hands by setting up a primary health centre in a local school, but it hardly helped. “Except for an occasional visit by a junior doctor and para-medical staff, nothing much has happened. It doesn’t have any facilities, though the authoritie­s promised to set up a hospital,” Mangalam said.

A study conducted in March this year by local environmen­talists under Alluri Sitarama Raju Vignana Kendram on environmen­t, health and safety of people in the villages surroundin­g LG Polymers, observed that the GVMC authoritie­s were neither monitoring water bodies periodical­ly nor getting an expert study on the water quality.

An official of the GVMC, however, denied contaminat­ion of the drinking water in villages. “Scientists belonging to Csirnation­al Environmen­t Engineerin­g Research Institute studied the water samples in and around the area and found that styrene is insoluble in water and would drain away in case of water flow. We are supplying Godavari water to local residents,” the official said.

 ?? PTI FILE ?? Vapour billows out from the LG Polymers industry in Visakhapat­nam.
PTI FILE Vapour billows out from the LG Polymers industry in Visakhapat­nam.

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