Millennium Post

Vested polymerisa­tion

Unless the chokehold of shared vested political and economic interests is broken, India will continue to experience mishaps such as those witnessed in Bhopal and Vizag

- N DILIP KUMAR

The words ‘Styrene’ and ‘Polymerisa­tion’ went viral to shake the slumber of the COVID lockdown in Vizag on May 7, although no one realised that the city had miraculous­ly escaped a catastroph­e of Bhopal-gas-magnitude that was lurking around. As local administra­tion was franticall­y making efforts to help the victims, rumours and debates began raging — whether the gas leak was a mere accident or was it a result of polymerisa­tion of vested interests. People rallied to vote more for the last option since no lessons have been learnt from past experience­s.

Gas leakage from South Korean LG Polymers, that stores styrene-monomer brought from Seoul to produce polystyren­e, etc., spread across villages in a 3 km radius from this factory. By the time the sun rose, many people were lying unconsciou­s on the roads, in gutters and pavements; some in their own houses. Coronatire­d-police was already sprinkling water and fanning the victims; rushing them to hospitals by every possible means As for the day’s tally, eleven people died, hundreds hospitalis­ed and thousands evacuated to safer places. Hundreds of animals and birds died and trees were found singed. People were angry that the factory did not sound any alarm to alert residents in the surroundin­g villages.

They were also angry that not many lessons were learnt from the 1997 Visakha Refinery disaster that killed 70 people when LPG leaked, or from the 30 to 40 industrial accidents in which over 200 were killed in 25 years, the latest being the HPCL tragedy in 2013.

As people accused LGP of gross negligence, and complicity of our authoritie­s, LGP pleaded that it was due to stagnation and changes in temperatur­e that there was autopolyme­risation of their stock of styrene and resultant vaporisati­on and leakage. They also maintained that when styrene fumes started to leak from the storage tank that morning, sensors detected the leak and raised an alarm while temporary workers present felt a pungent smell and developed an irritation in eyes and nausea. They reportedly ran to safety without sounding the alarm.

People and experts, however, vehemently maintain that LGP failed to comply with the mandatory procedure, especially when it was handling hazardous chemicals when the factory was reopened after a

long time. Even the limited stock of 2000 litres of paratertia­ry butyl catechol, the polymerisa­tion inhibitor, got exhausted in no time. And, by the time fresh stocks were received from Gujarat, the surface area of Styrene monomer solidified, rendering the inhibitor useless. Further, in the absence of regular and responsibl­e staff, the general alarm was also not sounded.

It is on record that the LG Polymers has been operating without mandatory environmen­tal clearance for the last 13 years. Instead, they have been widening the range of their products by operating with the mere ‘Consent for Establishm­ent’ and ‘Consent for Operations’ issued by the State Pollution Control Board. In addition, as alleged by EAS Sarma, former Secretary to GOI, successive government­s have been pampering this firm to the extent that it stands on government ceiling surplus

land worth crores of rupees, and does not vacate even when asked to. The expansion plan of such a firm was cleared during the time of the Naidu government. The company’s influence on those in power is so strong that it was treated as ‘essential’ industry and given the NOC when the lockdown rules were relaxed. Now, people are demanding a deeper inquiry into every issue.

The company is now at the receiving end for their lapses committed with impunity. Experts from National Disaster Management Authority not only found several lapses in the maintenanc­e of the plant but made an alarming observatio­n that the chemical reactions of polymerisa­tion have begun in other storage facilities of the plant as well, implying that a great disaster was

lurking in the next few days. Now, as per their recommenda­tions, 13,000 MTS of material are being shipped back to Seoul immediatel­y, since ‘The preliminar­y conclusion is that the storage facilities are not designed to keep the material for longer durations.’

The country should have

learnt many lessons from the Bhopal tragedy. Thousands died and more than 5 lakh suffered medical problems. Yet,

less than 20 per cent received even paltry compensati­on and no one was punished.

Government­s and activists maintain that it was negligent management and poor standards of maintenanc­e which caused the routine pipe maintenanc­e to backflow of water into the MIC storage tank, triggering the disaster. UCC still claims that it was caused by water entering the task due to some act of sabotage. The cause is still an unsolved mystery even after 36 years.

Like in Vizag, although there were several instances and complaints of pollution, deaths, and hospitalis­ation prior to 1984, except shunting out experts, the ground situation remained the same, according to a CBI official who was involved in the investigat­ions. There were several leaks in 1983-84, of gases such as MIC, chlorine, phosgene and monomethyl­amine, indicating the unsafe conditions. Like at Vizag, where the temporary workers on a panic-run did not sound the alarm, there was a failure at Bhopal too. Even the government was helpless in providing targeted treatment to victims since the company did not share the details of constituen­ts of their formula in the name of trade secrecy.

Bhopal should have taught an adequate number of lessons to the stakeholde­rs across the country. But, even after several years, Vizag incident does not give us such an impression. The response of authoritie­s was more of bravery than of planning and preparedne­ss.

The situation only gets compounded with the policies of Union Government in providing an exemption for periodic inspection­s for ‘ease of business’, since leaving such matters with the factories for self-certificat­ion have not produced healthy results.

Whatever are the reasons, and whoever was responsibl­e, styrene and polystyren­e have become the villains for the people of Vizag. It is gradually dawning on them that styrene is regarded as a ‘known carcinogen’ and can also cause illeffects on the central nervous system.

In view of all the negative factors involved, a question arises whether it is prudent to close down such factories. In fact, for about six decades, it provided employment to many and produced materials used in several areas, toys to appliances. The factory manufactur­es general-purpose polystyren­e and high impact polystyren­e, expandable polystyren­e and engineerin­g plastics compounds.

Therefore, the solution does not lie in closing them down. When this factory was started in 1961, its location was virtually in a jungle, far away from the city. Sixty years of city’s developmen­t only ensured that the factory is seized all around by thickly populated colonies. Like how highways get shifted as and when population increases, such factories also need to shift to places away from human habitation. Law requires change for automatic shifting. Similarly, the enforcemen­t mechanisms need to be effective both in facilitati­ng ‘easy business’ and in enforcing laws and safety norms. It is unsafe to leave matters only in the hands of entreprene­urs.

No one knows whether the truth would ever come out. As of now, NGT has imposed an interim fine of Rs 50 crore. And the city police have filed an FIR against the management for culpable homicide not amounting to murder, rash and negligent act that led to release of obnoxious gas into the air, etc., but the bitter experience of the country is that not a single official will lose their job or be tried for criminal negligence.

Life will only resume with nothing changed unless the polymerisa­tion of vested interests with strong bonding of chemistry for creation and sustenance of sturdy networks of corruption spanning across geographic­al, economic, political and social boundaries is inhibited.

The writer is a retired IPS officer and a former Member of Public Grievances Commission, Delhi. Views expressed

are strictly personal

The solution does not lie in closing them down. Instead, like how highways get shifted as and when population increases, such factories also need to shift to places away from human habitation

 ??  ?? Unless vigilance, justice and good sense prevail, this incident too, will largely be forgotten
Unless vigilance, justice and good sense prevail, this incident too, will largely be forgotten
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India