India goes ahead with Tipaimukh project

Indian government is going ahead with its proposed 1,500 megawatt (MW) Tipaimukh hydro power project in Manipur despite objections from non-government organisations (NGO) in India and opposition parties in Bangladesh.

Quoting Prem Chand Pankaj, chairman and managing director of state owned North Eastern Electric Power Corporation Ltd (Neepco), Indo-Asian News Service (IANS) said, "All apprehensions are baseless. The project would be commissioned despite opposition within the country and outside."

A section of environmentalists and activists in Manipur and Bangladesh fear that rivers flowing through the countries could be adversely impacted by the project.

Originally conceptualised and awarded to Neepco in 1999, the project was handed over to a consortium comprising National Hydroelectric Power Corp (NHPC) and Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam (SJVN) and the Manipur government last year.

Pankaj said, "We would soon ask the government to hand the project back to Neepco for its early commissioning. The delay in execution of the vital power project would create numerous problems."

"Some so called environmentalists and NGOs for the past few years have been campaigning against the project and misleading people," said Pankaj, who took over as Neepco chairman and managing director last month.

Setting aside fears, the senior electrical engineer said only 74 families would be rehabilitated elsewhere due to the implementation of the Rs 8,138 crore (US $1.7 billion) Tipaimukh project.

The project, located on the Barak river under Churachandpur district in western Manipur, is under attack from opposition parties and environmental groups in Bangladesh, which say it could cause desertification in their country.

Part of the Brahmaputra river system, the Barak bifurcates into the Surma and Kushiyara rivers on entering Sylhet district in eastern Bangladesh.

IANS said Bangladesh's opposition party BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia in a letter also asked Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to stop construction of the project.

Incidentally, at the end of the three-day India visit of Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in January last year, a joint communiqué by the two countries said "The prime minister of India reiterated the assurance that India would not take steps on the Tipaimukh project that would adversely impact Bangladesh."

Source : The Daily Star

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