Sunday, March 27, 2011

Orissa


Orissa
The Orissa government has constituted a three-member expert committee to examine various issues pertaining to the controversial Polavaram project. The expert committee has been constituted by the state government in accordance with the Supreme Court of India and the state has sent the names of these experts to the apex court.
The members of the expert committee are Anil D Mohile, former chairman of the Central Water Commission (CWC), D K Goswami, professor of IIT-Delhi and M Perumal, professor of IIT-Roorkee.
It may be noted that earlier this month, the Supreme Court in its hearing had directed the governments of Andhra Pradesh and Orissa to form expert committees to scrutinize various issues pertaining to the Polavaram project. The apex court had heard the case on March 3.

The Orissa government had approached the Supreme Court of India on September 4 last year, challenging the Centre's decision to give final environmental clearance for the project.
On October 4 last year, the apex court had asked the Government of India to file its response within a month to the petition filed by the Orissa government in connection with the controversial Polavaram project.
In its suit, Orissa had sought a declaration that Andhra Pradesh had no right or entitlement to undertake or proceed with the Polavaram project on the Godavari river. It has also stated that embankments were not permanent solutions to effectively contain submergence during floods.
Moreover, the extent of submergence due to design flood (which had been revised to 50 lakh cusecs from the original 36 lakh cusecs by the CWC itself) and the backwater effect along the Sabari and Sileru limbs (flowing through Orissa territory into the Godavari in Andhra Pradesh) had been finalised by the CWC without estimating the flood contributions from these limbs separately by following any rational procedure or acceptable norm, according to the petition filed by the Orissa government.
As per the estimates of the state government, the project was likely to submerge 2119.38 hectares of land in Naxalite-affected tribal areas of Malkangiri .
Sources: http://www.business-standard.com

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