Incumbents -Awami League Regime need to back out of Rampal power plant deal
THE ongoing debate over the possible impact of a proposed 1,320-megawatt coal-fired power plant at Rampal in Bagerhat on the nearby Sundarban resembles, to a great extent, to the sustained deliberation on the environmental fallout of the Indian plan to construct the Tipaimukh dam on the upstream of the river Barak, which splits into the rivers Surma and Kushiyara as it enters Bangladesh, with the Awami League-led government giving precedence to the views of its Indian counterparts over those of local experts and environmentalists.
According to a report front-paged in New Age on Sunday, local green and rights activists have unanimously dismissed the Indian power secretarys remark on January 30 that the thermal power plant, proposed to be installed within nine miles of the worlds largest mangrove forest, by an Indian private-sector firm under a memorandum of understanding it signed with the Bangladesh government in August 2010, would have very little impact on the environment. The green and rights activists fear that the emission and noise to be generated by the proposed plant would result in the extinction of several animal and plant species. Moreover, a committee of environmental experts, as quoted by one of them, has said that the carbon emitted by the planned power plant will affect the biodiversity and pollute water, thereby ultimately damaging Sundarban.
It is true that Bangladesh is starved for energy and may ultimately need to espouse coal-powered electricity generation. However, the obvious question is why the government has agreed on a site so close to Sundarban. The answer seems to lie in the alleged asymmetry of benefits to be had by India and Bangladesh.
According to the member-secretary of the National Committee to Protect Oil, Gas, Mineral Resources, Power and Ports, Professor Anu Muhammad, as quoted in the New Age report, the deal stipulates that the Indian company will bear only 15 per cent of the production cost but get 50 per cent of the electricity generated. Given that the deal is so clearly tilted in Indias favour, it is perhaps easy to explain the site selection the proposed site is closer to India. In such circumstances, it is only expected that the Indian political establishment and bureaucracy would try to underplay the projects environmental consequence for Bangladesh. What is, however, shockingbut perhaps not surprisingis the apparent acquiescence of the AL-led government to the whims and wishes of its Indian counterparts.
Ever since their assumption of office in January 2009, the incumbents have persisted with the claim of having turned a corner in the bilateral relations between Bangladesh and India.
Regrettably, however, they have appeared either unable, if not unwilling, to secure the best deal for Bangladesh in bilateral negotiations with India be it on trade and commerce, sharing of trans-boundary river, border dispute and whatever have you.
The Rampal power plant looks headed to be another Tipaimukh dam in terms of devastating environmental and ecological impact on Bangladesh, that too, with visible collusion of the AL-led government.
It is imperative under such circumstances that conscious sections of society on both sides of the border raise their voice in protest against the Rampal power project and force their respective governments to back out; after all, the consequence of damage or destruction of Sundarban will be direly felt by the people of both the countries.
Incumbents need to back out of Rampal power plant deal
THE ongoing debate over the possible impact of a proposed 1,320-megawatt coal-fired power plant at Rampal in Bagerhat on the nearby Sundarban resembles, to a great extent, to the sustained deliberation on the environmental fallout of the Indian plan to construct the Tipaimukh dam on the upstream of the river Barak, which splits into the rivers Surma and Kushiyara as it enters Bangladesh, with the Awami League-led government giving precedence to the views of its Indian counterparts over those of local experts and environmentalists.
According to a report front-paged in New Age on Sunday, local green and rights activists have unanimously dismissed the Indian power secretarys remark on January 30 that the thermal power plant, proposed to be installed within nine miles of the worlds largest mangrove forest, by an Indian private-sector firm under a memorandum of understanding it signed with the Bangladesh government in August 2010, would have very little impact on the environment. The green and rights activists fear that the emission and noise to be generated by the proposed plant would result in the extinction of several animal and plant species. Moreover, a committee of environmental experts, as quoted by one of them, has said that the carbon emitted by the planned power plant will affect the biodiversity and pollute water, thereby ultimately damaging Sundarban.
It is true that Bangladesh is starved for energy and may ultimately need to espouse coal-powered electricity generation. However, the obvious question is why the government has agreed on a site so close to Sundarban. The answer seems to lie in the alleged asymmetry of benefits to be had by India and Bangladesh.
According to the member-secretary of the National Committee to Protect Oil, Gas, Mineral Resources, Power and Ports, Professor Anu Muhammad, as quoted in the New Age report, the deal stipulates that the Indian company will bear only 15 per cent of the production cost but get 50 per cent of the electricity generated. Given that the deal is so clearly tilted in Indias favour, it is perhaps easy to explain the site selection the proposed site is closer to India. In such circumstances, it is only expected that the Indian political establishment and bureaucracy would try to underplay the projects environmental consequence for Bangladesh. What is, however, shockingbut perhaps not surprisingis the apparent acquiescence of the AL-led government to the whims and wishes of its Indian counterparts.
Ever since their assumption of office in January 2009, the incumbents have persisted with the claim of having turned a corner in the bilateral relations between Bangladesh and India.
Regrettably, however, they have appeared either unable, if not unwilling, to secure the best deal for Bangladesh in bilateral negotiations with India be it on trade and commerce, sharing of trans-boundary river, border dispute and whatever have you.
The Rampal power plant looks headed to be another Tipaimukh dam in terms of devastating environmental and ecological impact on Bangladesh, that too, with visible collusion of the AL-led government.
It is imperative under such circumstances that conscious sections of society on both sides of the border raise their voice in protest against the Rampal power project and force their respective governments to back out; after all, the consequence of damage or destruction of Sundarban will be direly felt by the people of both the countries.
Incumbents need to back out of Rampal power plant deal