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UNESCO recommends placing Sundarbans in danger zone

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The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)’s World Heritage Centre has recommended to place the Sundarbans in the danger zone as the present government has not canceled the Rampal project as yet, nor has it taken any initiative to remove the factories from the area.

A 21-member committee finalised this proposal on Friday. This proposal will be submitted for consideration at the upcoming annual meeting that will be held in Poland from 2 to 12 July. The organisation said 8 of the 10 recommendations that they made were not implemented.

In three different phases back in 2013, 2014, and 2016, UNESCO recommended that the Bangladeshi government cancel this project. In their last effort, a group of specialists visited the Sundarbans and said the Rampal project would harm the forest irretrievably.

State minister for power, energy and mineral resources Nasrul Hamid said “This is a matter of the environment and forests ministry. We have their consent in this regard and they will monitor whether we violate of the conditions. They will also monitor whether the heritage of Sundarbans will be impacted ot not. We will show UNESCO that the Rampal project will not harm the Sundarbans.

Due to UNESCO's strict stance, a six-member team. led by prime minister's energy advisor DrTawfiq-e-ElahiChowdhury, will visit the headquarters, said the ministry of power, energy and mineral Resources (MPEMR).

However, the ministry of environment and forests did not give environmental clearance. Environment and forest minister Anwar Hossain told ProthomAlo“We have only allowed them to run the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA). We hope UNESCO will be pleased with our initiative."

UNESCO published a report of 199 pages on ninety nine world heritage site where expressed their position and recommendation regarding the Sundarbans.

The report not only recommended to run an EIA, but also said the Pashur river should be dredged, all movements of water vehicles should be stopped and finally, a monitoring team formed to determine damage to the forest caused by the factories and the construction of the Rampal project, and to prepare a report on the subject.

The National Committee to Protect Sundarbans convenor Sultana Kamal told Prothom Alo “We have already presented eight papers on the harm that the Rampal Coal Plant will do to the Sundarbans. Despite our reports, the government is running the construction of the project will destroy the forest forever.”

“We want to retain the Sundarbans' position as a World Heritage Site. The government still has time to cancel this project."

The UNESCO report also said the government did not stop the construction work despite the scientific data that was shown to them. Back in 2014, a tanker carrying furnace oil collided with another cargo vessel and sunk in a river in the Sundarbans. Another cargo vessel carrying coal and cement sank in the Shela river. The government did not carry out any study to measure the impact.

The environment and forest ministry, the ministry of power, energy and mineral resources (MPEMR), and the Center for Environmental and Geographic Information Services (CEGIS) formed a team and went to UNESCO headquarters in Paris and had a meeting with the officials of World Heritage Centre, where the team said the Rampal project will not harm the Sundarbans along with data.

After the team returned to Bangladesh, UNESCO published a press release where they said they will maintain their previous stance on the forest. Director General of the ministry of power, energy and mineral resources' power cell Mohammad Hossain told Prothom Alo “We have a meeting with the UNESCO next Monday where we will apprise them of the initiatives that the government has taken to protect the Sundarbans/”

The National Committee to Protect Oil-Gas-Mineral Resources and Power-Ports member Anu Muhammad said “The Bangladeshi specialists pointed out how Rampal Project will harm the Sundarbans, then other specialists of the world also supported the their arguments. UNESCO reflected their opinions.”

He also said the government is destroying this world heritage with their obstinate attitude and this will create a black chapter in the history Bangladesh.

http://en.prothom-alo.com/bangladesh/news/148729/UNESCO-recommends-placing-Sundarbans-in-danger
 
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I was going to say vested quarters in Indian Govt. can strong arm and bribe the Hasina Govt. but how do you bribe UNESCO?

Hanging in the balance is tens of millions of dollars of UN contracts and NGO activity funds.

UN might also end up taking action against the Govt. of India, like the Govt. of Finland (?) did (withdrawal of funds) ....

Aab kiya hoga re Kalia? :-)
 
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Is Rampal worth the political cost?
  • Afsan Chowdhury
  • Published at 07:08 PM May 14, 2017
  • Last updated at 07:17 PM May 14, 2017
The government is going ahead with the Rampal power plant despite large scale popular protests MAHMUD HOSSAIN OPU

Given the public backlash, AL’s inflexibility on Rampal is one of the few mysteries in our politics today

What began as a well-meaning environmental activist movement has become a full-blooded political one, with friends and enemies on both sides stretching beyond borders.
The arguments of the anti-Rampal lobby have firmly been grounded in emotive spaces from the beginning.

The National Oil and Gas Protection Committee name itself evokes a mission to protect national interests. What was once just an energy project has become a symbolic case to test the present government’s commitment to public sentiment, not just the environment. To this is the added anxiety about how free it is when dealing with India.

Indo-Bangla pressure point?
The Rampal project has already proven a major pressure on Indo-Bangla relations with casual speculation about a brow-beating India.

Considering the fact that the protests are led by the Left Front of sorts — who have limited public clout — one suspects that it was the issue itself that is seen as very sensitive rather than the protests.

The government seems to have felt obligated to go after the protesters.
The overzealous reaction by the government has raised questions about how independent Bangladesh is, or can be, when it comes to deciding such bilateral projects with India.

It might be useful to form a neutral body of scientists to actually explore the contentions regarding the Rampal project and help the government decide whether the project is too politically toxic
But Indian analysts say that after helping neutralise India’s North East insurgency by refusing sanctuary to activists, India feels indebted to Bangladesh and to Hasina. If Hasina goes back on Rampal, India will not push to ensure continued anti-insurgency support.

In that case, why the politically risky pursuit of defending Rampal?

Investor hesitation
Meanwhile, the hesitation of European investors in Indian Rampal contractors has been increasing, and some Scandinavian countries have already conveyed their reluctance to participate. The French are also not happy, and many other countries are not keen in an environmentally stigmatised project.

This is not because they care about the environment, but such a tag carries stigma which may affect share market value.
Already, Rampal has been red-flagged by many environmental groups internationally and the fall-out is now making association with it embarrassing.

But what sort of option does it leave open for Hasina now?
If she withdraws by herself she will be seen as weak for having bowed down to public pressure, and that could end up sending a signal to her political enemies that she wants to avoid.

Her main strategy is to appear strong and act from that position of strength. In that case, the protestors are a political construct, however small, so she wants to avoid being “flexible.” By giving approval to the anti-Rampal lobby, BNP has made the issue a matter of honour for the AL to stick it out.
As things heat up, and it becomes even more of a political-partisan issue, AL will not be enjoying this, particularly when the elections are approaching.

For a party that has shown it is ready to make any alliance as long as it is convenient, including with Hefazat — a force that actually tried to topple her — her refusal to be more flexible on Rampal seems odd.

Barring BNP and Jamaat-e-Islami, she is not keen on a conflict course with any force. So why this stance on Rampal?

Will it affect voting?
Public dislike for the Rampal project is likely to grow stronger the longer this issue is allowed to fester. That dislike may well translate into votes for the opposition, and this vote is not from a small Qawmi Madrasa fringe but the larger national pool.

It is the mainstream vote, a part of the floating voters who decide every election result unless there is a massive wave. Exactly why AL is so inflexible on Rampal is becoming a bigger question than the project itself.

It’s possible that Hasina will not back down as long as her opponents have a political banner. It might be useful to form a neutral body of scientists to actually explore the contentions regarding the Rampal project and help the government decide whether the project is too politically toxic to go ahead with.

As the controversy becomes bigger than the project, Hasina will have to face tough decisions ahead, and they are going to be more political in nature than about energy production in an environmentally sensitive area.

Afsan Chowdhury is a multi-media journalist, historian, and litterateur.
 
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Even many of the hard core AL supporters are against this move along with the young generation people as you can see their chanting in social networking sites. We need electricity but dont understand why so obsessed with a particular place like Rampal.
 
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I was going to say vested quarters in Indian Govt. can strong arm and bribe the Hasina Govt. but how do you bribe UNESCO?

Hanging in the balance is tens of millions of dollars of UN contracts and NGO activity funds.

UN might also end up taking action against the Govt. of India, like the Govt. of Finland (?) did (withdrawal of funds) ....

Aab kiya hoga re Kalia? :-)
wat nonsense why should Indian govt be bothered? The company will build the plant where the land is provided. Its the responsibility of the BD govt to provide land not India.
 
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The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)’s World Heritage Centre has recommended to place the Sundarbans in the danger zone as the present government has not canceled the Rampal project as yet, nor has it taken any initiative to remove the factories from the area.
The BD govt. will be in a little precarious position if UNESCO is adamant to declare Sundarbans a danger zone because of building Rampal. Govt. cannot probably fight off criticism from the UNESCO. It may cause the plant to be moved to another place, which I personally do not like.
 
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The BD govt. will be in a little precarious position if UNESCO is adamant to declare Sundarbans a danger zone because of building Rampal. Govt. cannot probably fight off criticism from the UNESCO. It may cause the plant to be moved to another place, which I personally do not like.
Could you please justify our plausible reasons please?
 
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I was going to say vested quarters in Indian Govt. can strong arm and bribe the Hasina Govt. but how do you bribe UNESCO?

Hanging in the balance is tens of millions of dollars of UN contracts and NGO activity funds.

UN might also end up taking action against the Govt. of India, like the Govt. of Finland (?) did (withdrawal of funds) ....

Aab kiya hoga re Kalia? :-)

I think this will be the last project for BHEL, the company involved. They are not going to win any tender in future after being blacklisted by many international institutions.
 
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01:48 PM, June 10, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:52 PM, June 10, 2017
River dredging, coal transportation for Rampal plant will damage aquatic resources: Report
Star Online Report

Huge dredging of the rivers in and around the Sundarbans and transportation of coal for Rampal ower plant project will seriously damage fish and other aquatic resources, scientists revealed in a new report today.

"Dredging and sediment disposal in estuarine and coastal waters such as the Sundarbans Reserve Forest and Bay of Bengal will increase turbidity and sedimentation, affecting light availability for marine organisms" the report said.

Bangladesh Paribesh Andolon and the National Committee on Saving the Sundarbans presented the report at a press conference at the Serajul Islam Auditorium of Dhaka University today.

Dr William Kleindl, research faculty at Montana State University, US, and Dr Jon Brodie, professional research fellow at ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at the James Cook University, Australia, prepared the study on request from The National Committee for Saving the Sundarbans.

The report was prepared based on Bangladesh government’s plan on dredging the rivers to create channel for transporting coal for the Rampal power plant project.

Over 33 million tonnes of dredge spoil are proposed to be removed from the Bay of Bengal and Pashur river to create channel for coal transportation to the project site.

http://www.thedailystar.net/country...m_medium=newsurl&utm_term=all&utm_content=all
 
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01:48 PM, June 10, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:52 PM, June 10, 2017
River dredging, coal transportation for Rampal plant will damage aquatic resources: Report
Star Online Report

Huge dredging of the rivers in and around the Sundarbans and transportation of coal for Rampal ower plant project will seriously damage fish and other aquatic resources, scientists revealed in a new report today.

"Dredging and sediment disposal in estuarine and coastal waters such as the Sundarbans Reserve Forest and Bay of Bengal will increase turbidity and sedimentation, affecting light availability for marine organisms" the report said.

Bangladesh Paribesh Andolon and the National Committee on Saving the Sundarbans presented the report at a press conference at the Serajul Islam Auditorium of Dhaka University today.

Dr William Kleindl, research faculty at Montana State University, US, and Dr Jon Brodie, professional research fellow at ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at the James Cook University, Australia, prepared the study on request from The National Committee for Saving the Sundarbans.

The report was prepared based on Bangladesh government’s plan on dredging the rivers to create channel for transporting coal for the Rampal power plant project.

Over 33 million tonnes of dredge spoil are proposed to be removed from the Bay of Bengal and Pashur river to create channel for coal transportation to the project site.

http://www.thedailystar.net/country...m_medium=newsurl&utm_term=all&utm_content=all

Rampal :nono::nono::nono:
 
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Rampal Power Plant: Myths debunked
Shamsuddoza Sajen and Moyukh Mahtab June 01, 2017
A timeline of the Rampal debate. Credit: Shaer Reaz and Amiya Halder

The construction of the 1,320MW coal-fired power plant at Rampal, near the Sundarbans, began last April. Hailed by proponents as a major step towards the development of the country and decried by protesters as a threat to the Sundarbans, its biodiversity and those whose livelihood depend on the forest, one would assume that a project such as this would result in engaging debate. One would be wrong.

From January 2013, when the Memorandum of Understanding was signed between the Bangladesh Power Development Board and the National Thermal Power Corporation Ltd, India (NTPC), the project has been mired in controversy. Land acquisition for the project started two years before an Environmental Impact Assessment was conducted. What followed over the course of the next four years has been relentless activism backed by experts on one hand and a constant demonisation of any dissent on the other. With facts and counter-facts pushed by both sides, one wonders how much truth has finally seeped through so that the average citizen can at least have an informed opinion about the issue, if not a choice.

The critics of Rampal include environmentalists, scientists and experts. Yet, the defence for the power plant has remained the same. But, under scrutiny, how do these claims, meant to relieve us of our fears about the potential risks of the power plant, hold?

Rampal is far enough from Sundarbans to be safe
A major narrative pushed by proponents of Rampal has been that the power plant being 14 km away from the Sundarbans is cause enough not to worry. But, is this far enough a distance for Rampal not to have ecological impacts on the forest and its biodiversity?
0216-sundarbans-map.png

Credit: Global Forest Watch
In 2013, environmental expert and professor of Environmental Science at Khulna University, Dr Abdullah Harun Chowdhury after conducting an independent EIA, found that the impacts of the power plant on the Sundarbans would be negative and irreversible. Pointing to his study on the impact of an oil spill in the Sundarbans in 2014, he says that due to that one single incident, the spilled oil had spread around 500 sq. km.

It has been said that emission from the power plant will not reach the Sundarbans since the wind generally flows against the direction of the forest. But, the official EIA acknowledges that “During November to February, prevailing wind flows towards South [towards the Sundarbans] and the rest of the year it flows mostly towards North. In most of the time of a year, emissions from the power plant shall not reach the Sundarbans except November to February.” What happens during these three or four months is left unanswered. The EIA also mentions that emissions from the chimneys of the plant, containing harmful pollutants such as SOx, NOx, and mercury, will disperse at least 25 km from the source. This also counters the claim that a distance of 14 km will protect the forest from emissions, since according to the EIA itself, the emission can disperse to much greater distances.

A mission conducted in 2016 by the Unesco World Heritage Centre and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) raised similar concerns. The report of the mission stated that due to “the intrinsic connectivity between the property and the Sundarbans forest, it is recommended that the Rampal power plant project is cancelled and relocated to a more suitable location where it would not negatively impact the Sundarbans Reserved Forest and the property.” It pointed towards the high likelihood of “contamination of the property and the surrounding Sundarbans forest from air and water pollution.” Yet, the 14 km myth still persists.

Super duper technology means nothing to worry about
Ultra Super Critical Technology. Just the name sounds fancy enough to assure. The claim that Rampal will use Ultra Super Critical Technology (USCT) has been one of the most oft-repeated arguments to justify the power plant’s construction. But what USCT actually is has seldom been made clear. In the simplest terms, it refers to the boiler which will be used to burn the coal and produce the energy. This claim raises two important questions.

Firstly, there remains confusion about whether USCT will actually be used in Rampal. Secondly, even if it were used, would it be a significant deterrent to pollution?

According to the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report (page 79) prepared by the government, Rampal will use Super Critical Technology (SCT). The tender documents, which are available on the Bangladesh Power Development Board website, also state the same. The EIA and tender documents have not been updated.
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Page 79 of the official EIA report.
Dr Ranajit Sahu, a US-based expert, who has over two decades of experience in the fields of environmental, chemical and mechanical engineering including design and specification of pollution control equipment, in an interview with us, says: “It is not clear when it was decided that Ultra Super Critical Technology will be used. What is the meaning of changing the technology in the public documents if the tender document is not changed—since that is the critical document against which the engineering bidders will actually provide the technology?”

This brings us to our second issue: that even if Ultra Super Critical Technology was being used, would it be a justification for the construction of a coal-fired power plant near the Sundarbans? Here one needs to understand that the difference between SCT and USCT is in how efficiently they can burn coal. The project EIA claims that for each one percent improvement in efficiency, there will be 2-3 percent decrease in emissions since it would require burning 2-3 percent less coal to produce the same amount of electricity. Taking the efficiency of SCT (35 – 40 percent) and USCT (40 – 45 percent) into account, the reduction in pollution can be calculated to be 10 to 20 percent if USCT is used.

But, USCT cannot arrest the pollutants, which would still be emitted. The extent of pollution will largely depend on whether technology is being used to get maximum control over the emissions. Dr. Sahu points out, “regardless of the technology selected, the reduction in emissions will be modest if Ultra Super Critical is selected versus just Super Critical.”
What emissions?
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Illustration: Ehsanur Raza Ronny
According to the the implementing body of Rampal Power Plant, BIFPCL (Bangladesh-India Friendship Power Company Limited), low-NOx burner technology will be used to arrest NOx emissions.

Dr. Ranajit Sahu, in reference to the the Environmental, Health, and Safety Guidelines International document of the World Bank/IFC, responds: “Typically, low-NOx burners (even advanced ones) will provide NOx reductions around 30-40 percent less as compared to standard burners. All modern SCRs [Selective Catalytic Reduction], on the other hand, typically reduce NOx by more than 90 percent. Thus, the NOx reductions (and environmental benefit) with SCR are much greater than just using advanced low NOx burners.”

Similarly, the government is using Electrostatic Precipitator (ESP) instead of the latest Baghouse technology for controlling ash and mercury emissions. According to Dr. Sahu, most modern Baghouses are designed to achieve efficiencies much greater than 99.9 percent.

He also pointed out that once the coal is burned, most of the mercury in the coal is emitted in the gaseous form and only a small fraction in the particulate form. ESP technology cannot capture the gaseous mercury, while “baghouse, because of the way it works, will capture more of the mercury, including some of the gas phase mercury.” Therefore, the claim that the latest technologies, which can significantly reduce the emission concerns, are being used in Rampal, fly in the face of these facts.

The fish are alright
It has also been claimed that there will be no negative effect on aquatic life due to the power plant.

The plant will use 9,000 cubic metres [1 cubic metre = 1,000 litres] of water per hour and discharge 5,000 cubic metres of it per hour into the river. For this, the plant will continue to suck in more water to make up for the portion that is lost. This puts serious pressure on the quantity and quality of the already scarce water resource of the Pashur River.

A percentage of the water will be used to wash the ash produced from power generation into the wet coal ash pond. It will be contaminated by heavy metals because there is no water treatment system there. As per the EIA report, the ash would be initially stored in a 100-acre pond. Donna Lisenby of WaterAid warns that having an ash pond beside the Pashur River is like courting disaster. If the pond were flooded, the ash containing heavy metals such as lead, mercury, arsenic, chromium, and cadmium that are hazardous to human health and to wildlife, would spread throughout nearby areas and jeopardise the flora and fauna of the Sundarbans. Besides, groundwater would be contaminated if the heavy metals in the ash leach into groundwater due to any damage in the pond's lining, says the expert.
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Impact of coal ash ponds on water resources. Credit: Duke University
Again, the government says “temperature of discharge water shall never be more than two degree Centigrade above river water temperature at the edge of mixing zone which is as per stringent IFC norms”.

But, Donna Lisenby has countered this claim, saying that the above-mentioned statement of the government is crafted to mislead people who do not know what a mixing zone is or how large they can be. Given the close proximity of the Sundarbans and the fact that any water pollution will flow downstream into the breeding area for rare and endangered aquatic life and badly affect them [“Bangladesh should not waste her scarce clean water resources in coal-fired power plants.”, The Daily Star, June 11, 2015]

Covered ships equal no coal spillage
It has been claimed that because advanced, covered ships will be used to transport the 10,000 tonnes of coal which will be required daily by the plant, there will be no danger of spillages. But Bangladesh’s track record, in terms of spillages and of salvage efforts, is far from laudable.

Since 2015, there have been three incidents of coal-spillage in the Sundarbans. The response from the authorities have been far from effective. How will the government guarantee that such spillages, which are more likely to occur once the plant is in operation, will not have disastrous effects on the forest?
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Illustration: Yafiz Siddiqui
The National Committee to Save the Sundarbans (NCSS) has also pointed out that in order to ship the coal to Rampal, extensive dredging operations will be needed so that the ships can reach the site. “Specifically, 26 km from the Bay of Bengal to the project site must be dredged, removing over 34 million cubic metres of river bottom that provides habitat for fish, crustaceans, and dolphins.” These dredging operations would have to be redone every year to maintain access.

The EIA for Rampal admits that the environmental impacts of dredging the Pashur River and dumping of dredge spoil may increase turbidity of water, reduce fish catch, change fish habitat, migration, feeding, spawning, and diversity, and contaminate the river with spillage of oil, grease and effluent from dumping sites. Dredging may impact the dolphins of Pashur and Maidara rivers, and dredging and increased shipping without ‘properly maintained regulations’ may ‘impact the Sundarbans ecosystem especially Royal Bengal tiger, deer, crocodile, dolphins, mangroves, etc.’” (“10 questions: authorities answers, counter response”, The Daily Star, September 7, 2016).

Barapukuria worked out fine
"Normally, during combustion, the finer components of coal ash react with air and consequently generate different toxic substances such as CO2, SO2 and NO2 which is readily taken up by living beings so poses a possibility of rising environmental contamination with health risk around this power plant for present and future."

The Barapukuria coal-fired power plant has been used as an assurance. It has been claimed that even with its backdated subcritical technology, the plant does not have any adverse impact on the environment. But research studies clearly indicate to the possibility of “rising environmental contamination with health risk around the plant for present and future.” [M. Farhad Howladar, Md. Raisul Islam, A study on physico-chemical properties and uses of coal ash of Barapukuria Coal Fired Thermal Power Plant, Dinajpur, for environmental sustainability (2016) 1(4):233–247].

The study found that fly ash generated from power plants has “noticeable negative impact on soil, water, air and so on, of environment.” The blackish water of the nearby river Tilai shows the intensity of contamination due to the coal-fired power plant.

As Dr Ranajit Sahu further clarified, “we are not aware if many harmful emissions such as mercury and other toxics are being monitored near Barapukuria.” The threat from these pollutants has not been clarified.

Barapukuria is a 250 MW plant of which one unit of 125 MW runs effectively. Rampal, with the capacity of 1,320 MW, is ten times bigger than Barapukuria and so its coal requirement is much greater. Though the area Barapukuria is not as environmentally sensitive, its negative consequences speak volumes about the ensuing danger of building a big coal-fired power plant near the Sundarbans.

Because of the threat that Rampal poses to the Sundarbans, it is imperative that the government’s responses to its critics are well-substantiated. The debate cannot be mere repetition of the same claims, when facts to the contrary are being provided by experts and environmentalists alike. If the Rampal plant is environmentally sound, then the government should directly address the issues raised and clear the confusions caused by the contradictory claims about the technology to be used. The case for Rampal, if there is any, should be through a transparent fact-based debate, not through half-truths, and misleading facts and arguments.

The writers are members of the editorial department, The Daily Star.

Dr Ranajit Sahu, Dr Badrul Imam and Dr Abdullah Harun Chowdhury were consulted for this article.
http://www.thedailystar.net/star-weekend/spotlight/how-valid-are-the-claims-favour-rampal-1414039
 
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Bangladesh 6th on climate risk list
Tribune Desk
Bangladesh lost 0.732% of its GDP in last 20 years due to extreme weather events

Low-lying Bangladesh is among the top countries hit hardest by last two decades’ extreme weather events, the 2017 Global Climate Risk Index says.

Bangladesh has been ranked 6 among the top 10 worst affected countries in the report released by Bonn-based advocacy group Germanwatch.

The group came up with the findings after analysing weather related loss events from 1996 to 2015.

Between 1996 and 2015, an average of 679.05 people died from 185 climate events annually, the report says, adding that the country also lost 0.732% of its GDP.

According to the index, Honduras, Myanmar, and Haiti were the most afflicted by such disasters. The other countries in the top 10 list are Nicaragua, Philippines, Pakistan, Vietnam, Guatemala and Thailand.

“People all over the world have to face the reality of climate variability and in many parts of the world an increasing variability,” said the index.

“Between 1996 and 2015, more than 528,000 people died worldwide and losses of $3.08 trillion ((in Purchasing Power Parities) were incurred as a direct result of almost 11,000 extreme weather events,” the report added.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/environment/2017/06/10/bangladesh-6th-climate-risk/
 
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