/
Tata  Mundra : Story of a power project among the powerless Tata  Mundra : Story of a power project among the powerless

Tata Mundra : Story of a power project among the powerless - PowerPoint Presentation

marina-yarberry
marina-yarberry . @marina-yarberry
Follow
348 views
Uploaded On 2020-01-12

Tata Mundra : Story of a power project among the powerless - PPT Presentation

Tata Mundra Story of a power project among the powerless Delhi Mumbai Gujarat Tata Mundra The Project 4000 MW coalfired plant located near Mundra Port Gujarat Indias first Ultra Mega Power Project using supercritical technology ID: 772629

mundra project ifc tata project mundra tata ifc impact water impacts ash fish adani people power million company social

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document "Tata Mundra : Story of a power project ..." is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Tata Mundra: Story of a power project among the powerless

Delhi Mumbai Gujarat

Tata Mundra: The Project 4,000 MW coal-fired plant located near Mundra Port, GujaratIndia’s first Ultra Mega Power Project using supercritical technology PROJECT cost of US$4.2 billion to be financed by equity (US$1 billion) and debt from IFC (US$450 million), ADB (US$450 million), Korean ECAs (US$800 million), local banks (US$1.5 billion)Will sell electricity to state-owned utilities in 5 states – Gujarat, Maharashtra, Haryana, Rajasthan and Punjab Will import coal from Indonesia and other countries through the Mundra Port (Adani) Main equipment from Korea and Japan

Impacts: Social Failure to conduct free, prior, broad and meaningful consultations with communities Deeply flawed social and environmental impact assessmentsProject area identified as vacant land in EIA, while the areas has a high rural population density, and the land having multiple rural economic activities like fishing, fish drying, animal grazing being the main ones. Apart from failing in recognizing the fishing communities as affected in the impact assessments, it also failed to recognize salt-pan workers/owners and pastoralists as affected communities .

Social… Significant and irreversible loss of livelihoods of fisherfolks An Independent Expert Fact Finding team in 2012 found the causes as:  T he destruction of creeks and mangroves – nurseries of marine life, Thermal pollution from the power plants – the warm cooling water coming out of their outfall channels. Changing from closed cycle cooling system to open cycle: cutting corners to increase profits? Possible death of large number of fish seedling with the pumped intake water The possibility that chemical pollution is also being discharged along with the cooling water. The highly salinity due to discharge from the desalination plant Fishing grounds became highly inaccessible Access routes to fishing and grazing grounds have either been blocked or unusually lengthened by the Tata’s water channels.

Social… No employment for locals   While the project is in part premised on improving the living standard of local communities, only very few locals are employed by the company.   Impact on horticultureTwo important cash crops – Chiku(zapota /sapodilla) and Date Palms – are badly affected by fly ask and dust since Adani and Tata power plants started. No estimate of the loss. Impact on ground water Drawing of massive amounts of water from the precious aquifers ground water table having gone down fast in the last few years.   Labour Issues and Social Unrest Large influx of migrant labourers , illegal production and sell of liquor in the area, in a dry state like Gujarat, has sharply increased. Resulted in increase in domestic violence.

Impacts: Environment Destruction of mangroves   Large tracts of mangroves, dry-land forests and creeks, rich in biodiversity, and mud-flats were destroyed by the company in the course of its construction activities. The construction of associated facilities like port (which is being shared with that of the adjacent Adani power project), the inlet water channel (also shared with Adani project) and the outlet water channel caused irreversible damage to the fragile environment.  Absence of Cumulative Impact Studies The real impact of the Tata Mundra can be determined only when a cumulative impact assessment is done, which was never done. In the absence of cumulative impact assessment, companies will dodge the responsibility by passing it on to the other industry while the people will suffer endlessly.

Impacts: Health Ash Contamination and health issues Fly ash emanated from the project falls on the fish put out for drying, making it inedible and non-marketable. The fish also will get contaminated with the toxic fly ash falling on it, making it highly unsafe to consume the ash also falls on the salt pans around the project, which is one of the highest salt producing areas of India. Fly ash falling on fields and its grass consumed by the animals put them in danger of serious illness, in some cases, fatal. Exposure to such toxic particles in the air, and the high pollution resulting out of the Tata and the adjacent Adani project put the people at high health risks. Children’s Health at Risk   There is a roughly 20% increase in children’s respiratory diseases in the past two years, since the CGPL is functioning.

A recent study – Coal Kills (by Greenpeace) – estimate about 100-120 people are killed every year within this region only because of the impact of the thermal power projects in this area. CGPL is using about 13 million tons of imported coal, putting out nearly 40 million tons of CO2 each year - close to the entire CO2 emission of Bangladesh

Where did IFC go wrong? IFC failed to independently check the impact assessments made by the company and hence approved this project for financing on wrong assumption about impacts, which were heavily downplayed, and exaggerated benefits. IFC failed to put in place an independent and competent monitoring system to monitor the impacts and recommend corrective measures. Rather they relied and continue to rely on company’s reporting. IFC failed to monitor compliance of its social and environment safeguard policies.

Community Demands IFC uses its leverage to mitigate the impacts caused to the people and environment. IFC stop its funding to the project, until the social and environmental damages are satisfactorily mitigated.IFC stop the company from any further expansion of the project unless the damages already caused are mitigated.IFC stop funding any more coal projects, considering the immense damages it cause.

Current status   CAO complaint - awaitingADB complaint under processTata Mundra trying for expansion by 1600 MW – public hearing opposed Fish catch very lowOther projects opposed

Larger issues of IFC lending   Company using IFC’s lending as a leverage to raise more financing for the project.Irreversibility - who will pay for the loss? Between a government who wants to add 800,000 MW by 2032 by any cost, private companies who do not care about people, environment or the law, and international financial institutions who invents new lending models to increase their lending and avoid accountability, to whom should the people turn for justice?

Some Images: Tata Mundra Project under construction

Tata Mundra (left) and Adani sharing resources & negative impacts

Families under the shadow of Tata Mundra

The invisibles: Fisherfolk who were excluded in the assessment

Children who are badly affected by the pollution

Dry Fish which gets contaminated by fly ash

The outlet channel which cut the access to sea

The lives and livelihood of thousands are at stake

Tata Mundra is NOT a green project

Will the sun sets over Tata Mundra ?