Hi all,

See the news article below. This is a *very* important report, I feel.
 It has dangerous implications for all of India--but more so for the
vulnerable adivasi communities.  If the recommendations of this report
come to pass, that would be a roll-back of decades of activism in
trying to make the government accountable to local communities. That
would be a clear victory for all industrialists across the board.

Can we get a copy of the report?

Anivar


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Rajesh Ramakrishnan <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, May 28, 2009 at 7:33 AM
Subject: [foil] A dangerous green signal
To: FOIL <[email protected]>


Business Standard
Latha Jishnu: A dangerous green signal
Latha Jishnu / New Delhi May 28, 2009, 0:58 IST

A secret report aims to make environmental clearance a standardised
exercise that bypasses critical requirements.



Environmental safeguards, whittled down as they are, are coming under
strain once again as the government attempts to fast-track statutory
clearances for industrial and infrastructure projects. The effort this
time is to standardise formats and clearances and to arrive at a
single-window scheme of approvals that would negate the need to comply
with several critical laws. Environmental experts say that the most
dangerous of the proposed changes is to make environmental regulation
part of the clearance process itself.

The latest initiative has been launched because the government
believes that clearances are taking far too long and that projects are
getting stuck in procedural bottlenecks. At the 54th meeting of the
National Development Council in December 2007, Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh had promised that he would ask the finance ministry to
constitute an expert group “to go into the system of statutory
clearances for industrial and infrastructure projects and suggest
concrete ways for speeding these up”. Consequently, in April 2008 an
expert group was set up under the chairmanship of the secretary of the
Department of Economic Affairs. It comprised representatives of the
three industry lobbies (CII, Ficci, Assocham), the privately-owned
Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services and Infrastructure
Development and Finance Corporation and the government-owned India
Infrastructure Finance Company Ltd. There were also a couple of
officials from the Department of Industrial Policy and Planning and
the Planning Commission in it. Neither the Ministry of Environment and
Forests (MoEF) — it was only consulted with during the deliberations —
nor the environment lobby found a place in this group.

Over four sittings, it prepared a detailed report outlining
recommendations to cut short the delay in clearance. Ways of
implementing this secret report, which was ready in November 2008, are
now being studied by a high-powered committee convened by the Planning
Commission Secretary Subas Chandra Pani. This committee, too, has a
similar profile as the expert group, the only difference being that a
lone environmentalist, Sunita Narain, director of the Delhi-based
Centre for Science and Environment, is also part of it.

On the face of it, the expert group’s work could be described as a
housecleaning exercise in which dirty corners of the clearance process
are being rid of accumulated grime and blockages. The experts looked
at 10 central and four state-level clearances that are mandatory but
kept financial and sectoral clearances that are specific to, say,
power, ports, etc, out of its purview. Ditto for land acquisition and
the issues of relief and rehabilitation. Based on their analysis, they
have called for streamlining the processes through web-enabled formats
and online monitoring of the progress.

But that’s as far as the positive recommendations go. Embedded in
their 20-odd recommendations are far-reaching changes that are
weighted against a proper assessment of the environmental risks, and
experts are warning that the consequences of such a speeding up
process could be lethal in the long term. Among the worrying
proposals: Self-certification by the project developer is to be the
norm; public hearings are to be curtailed, the discussion being
restricted “to only those issues which are in dispute”; projects not
given clearances within a specified time-frame to be deemed as
cleared. In short, the 68-page dossier seeks relaxations and
exemptions for a host of projects while narrowing the processes
involved in procuring clearances. It also puts undue emphasis on
standardisation, which militates against the need for agencies to
apply their mind to the specific locations and the demands imposed by
different industrial and infrastructure projects.

The worst part is that the report is still marked secret and has not
been put up for public discussion. One copy, however, is doing the
rounds among the green lobby and is now available with Business
Standard. Videh Upadhyay, environmental lawyer who has examined the
recommendations of the group, is aghast at the critical changes that
are being sought to be made in the legal framework covering different
aspects of environmental clearance and regulation. For instance, the
expert group says that “once a project has been cleared under the EIA
notification, multiple other clearances then should not be required”.
This reflects a poor understanding of the functions of the different
laws. The blanket clearance sought to be given to industrial and
infrastructure projects is simply not on, says Upadhyay, because laws
such as the Air and Water Act have a different mandate from the EIA
clearance.

Narain, too, is taken aback by the suggestion. In a note to Pani, she
has said: “The committee has completely missed the point that there
are different roles — the promotion of industry cannot be dovetailed
into the regulation of industry.” This, in fact, is a universal
complaint of the green lobby. Manju Menon of the Kalpavriksh
Environmental Action Group of Delhi, an advocacy outfit, is emphatic
that the terms of reference for project evaluation cannot be
standardised beyond a point due to the peculiarities of the sites even
if the projects or the technology is similar. “The EIA,” she
emphasises, “is a qualitative process not a quantitative one.”

But the problem with the report is more fundamental: It is based on
the false premise that projects have been held up unduly. Going by the
statistics provided by the MoEF, the number of projects coming for
clearance has shot up from 240 in 2001 to 4,590 in 2007. Yet,
clearances have been given at a galloping rate without any
recruitments having been made in the last 15 years to augment its
technical staff. Although the report takes notes of this gaping lacuna
it makes no recommendations on this score.

Based on the minutes available on the MoEF website, the CSE estimates
that a total of 3,463 projects were assessed between January 1, 2008
and February 17, 2009. Of these, a staggering 75 per cent were
cleared; 24 per cent are pending and only 0.8 per cent has been
rejected. “The question that should be asked is why are so few
projects rejected? What is important to note is that a key reason for
delay is that companies are constantly asked to ‘justify’ the
feasibility of the project so that it can be ‘cleared’. In fact, we
have found that every time local people dispute the project, the
company wants the process delayed so that the matter dies down,” says
Narain.

A scrutiny of the case studies cited by the expert group reveals that
five projects have been selected arbitrarily: Two thermal power
projects in Arunachal Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh, a ropeway project in
Uttarakhand, Delhi’s municipal waste processing complex and a foundry
park in West Bengal, all of whose locations have been kept secret at
the request of the developer. None of the cases proves that there have
been undue delays across the board.

As Upadhyay points out, “You can as easily cite cases to prove the
other extreme. Projects have been cleared in just six days although
their impact was widespread. The clearance for the Ganga Expressway
which cuts through a dozen districts of Uttar Pradesh has been
challenged in the Allahabad High Court.”

The expert group report, thus, has to be scrutinised on three
criteria: the intent, methodology and content, he says. On all counts,
it turns out to be a suspect exercise, and is part of the effort to
whittle regulations periodically, say critics. The decision to set up
the expert groups comes a little over a year after the EIA
notification of 2006. That itself was a watering down of the 1994
regulation. In January this year, the MoEF attempted a further
‘streamlining’ of the 2006 notification which has incorporated a few
of the recommendations of the expert group already (see ‘Diluting
Environmental regulations’, April 4).

“What we need to discuss instead is the strengthening of the
regulatory agencies for better project assessment (not just
clearance); its personnel requirements and infrastructure needs. It is
important to focus on the monitoring aspects post-clearance, not just
the ‘transaction costs’ in clearance”, says Narain. But with the
industry and government intent on setting up a speedway for
clearances, it appears unlikely that they will heed sage advice

http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/latha-jishnudangerous-green-signal/359345/

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