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Panel suggests simpler eco clearance norms for infrastructure projects

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Source : The Business Line Date : 03.06.2009

Panel suggests simpler eco clearance norms for infrastructure projects


Clearances under numerous rules can take years to come


Our Bureau

New Delhi, June 2 A high-power Finance Ministry panel has recommended that infrastructure projects should be subjected to much simpler environmental clearance rules.

Currently, apart from the Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification, projects need to get numerous clearances from rules under Sections 3, 6 and 25 of the Environment (Protection) Act 1986. The process can take several years sometimes.

The panel suggested that industrial/infrastructure projects should be allowed to bypass these rules and that the EIA Notification should be comprehensive enough to cover all the other rules.

The report was submitted to the Prime Minister before the election. Mr Jairam Ramesh is entrusted with the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF).

The panel says that the Ministry does not grant the required clearances within the prescribed timeframe. To speed up things, it has come out with a large number of recommendations.

Thus, it has called for bringing in Standardised Terms of Reference (ToR) to minimise the time taken at the ‘scoping’ stage for repetitive projects.

This would apply to construction of berths and jetties, widening of national highways and construction of thermal power plants of capacity less than 1,000 MW.

Another recommendation is that all expansion of roads and highways should be exempted from public hearings.

Similarly, the expansion projects of major ports, which do not require additional land acquisition, should be exempted.

The panel suggested that data requirements should be relevant to the location of the project. Also, these should be identified and the onus of proof of correctness of the information should be placed upon the applicant.

It suggested a penalty, of cancellation of the project, if the information submitted is incorrect. This, it is expected, will reduce the scope for wrong information being filed.

In what may just be a coincidence, India eased import restrictions on scrap metals this week.

A few thousand tonnes were held up with the Customs, awaiting environmental clearance after they were found to be mildly radioactive.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 03 June 2009 07:39
 

Addressing urban poverty

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Source : The Hindu Date : 03.06.2009

Addressing urban poverty

India’s inequalities are more glaring in its urban areas. The country’s urban poor, according to Planning Commission estimates, number 80 million and constitute 25.70 per cent of the urban population. The socio-economic dynamics of urban poverty are very different and the problems the urban poor face are different from that faced by their rural counterparts who at 220 million form 28.3 per cent of rural population. Though the urban poor have better access to employment and income, these are irregular and are mostly in the informal sector. The other key determinants of urban poverty are the levels of access to facilities, such as housing, sanitation and drinking water, and services such as health care and education. Two economic factors aggravate the despair of the urban poor: the nature of employment, and the absence of social security. Yet, poverty alleviation programmes in India and elsewhere have had a marked rural bias, evident from the decrease in absolute numbers of the rural poor from 261 million in 1973-74 to 220 million in 2004-05 (Uniform Recall Period). This is in contrast to the rise in the numbers of the urban poor from 60 million to 80 million over the same period. Addressing urban poverty alleviation through the rural prism runs the risk of coming up with partial solutions, such as those based on self-employment schemes. As it is the lack of access to housing and public utilities that causes urban poverty more than factors related to employment and income, the strategies should differ from those for the rural poor.

For the Central government’s inclusive growth agenda to make a difference to the urban poor, interventions that insulate the poor from the multiple vulnerabilities of urban living are critical. In urban areas, the incidence of poverty is higher among workers in the informal sector. While the government’s proposal to extend the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme to urban areas, with modifications, is welcome to the extent that it will provide job opportunities and incomes to the urban poor, measures that prevent a relapse into poverty are also required. More important is to put in place policies that ensure access to affordable healthcare, expenses on which are a major cause for impoverishment of the vulnerable sections. A social security system for all unorganised workers, therefore, is a priority. Improving the conditions of housing for the urban poor is another area for urgent action. The larger aim of poverty reduction programmes should be to ensure that the vulnerable are not impoverished because of the pressures of urban living.

Last Updated on Thursday, 04 June 2009 06:33
 

NPCIL Signs Agreement with Westinghouse

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Courtesy : The Hindu Date : 02.06.2009

NPCIL signs agreement with Westinghouse

Staff Reporter

For AP1000 pressurised water nuclear reactors

TIRUNELVELI: Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL) and U.S.-based Westinghouse Electric Company (WEC) have signed a memorandum of understanding recently for commencing discussions on techno-commercial aspects of AP1000 pressurised water nuclear reactors in India.

The agreement was signed by Chairman and Managing Director, NPCIL, Shreyans Kumar Jain and President and Chief Executive Officer, WEC, Aris S. Candris in the presence of chairman of Atomic Energy Commission Anil Kakodkar.

About 50 per cent of the world’s 440 nuclear plants are based on Westinghouse technology.

According to the WEC, the AP1000 is the safest and most economical nuclear power plant available worldwide, and is the only Generation III+ reactor to receive design certification from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).

Simplification was a major design objective for the AP1000. The simplified plant design includes overall safety systems, normal operating systems, the control room, construction techniques, and instrumentation and control systems.

The result is a plant that is easier and less expensive to build, operate and maintain. The AP1000 design saves money and time with an accelerated construction time period of approximately 36 months, from the pouring of first concrete to the loading of fuel.

In a statement, Deputy General Manager (Corporate Communications), NPCIL, Mumbai, A.I. Siddiqui has said the MoU between the two companies followed the signing of the co-operation agreement between the Government of India and the Government of United States of America in last October.

NPCIL, now operating 17 nuclear reactors and constructing five more, including the 2 X 1,000 MWe VVER (pressurised water) reactors being constructed at Koodankulam with the technical assistance of Atomstroyexports, Russia, had planned for significant capacity addition in nuclear power generation.

Apart from constructing 700 MWe Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors as part of its indigenous nuclear programme, the NPCIL has also proposed to set up nuclear power reactors with the capacity of 1,000 MWe or even higher unit size based on the international cooperation.

Signing of this MoU is yet another milestone in the cooperation between NPCIL and WEC for preparing the contract and related details of setting up of multiple AP 1000 reactors in India.

The NPCIL has already signed MoUs with General Electric Hitachi (GEH), also US-based, for setting up of advanced boiling water reactors in India and Areva, France for European Pressurised Reactors

Last Updated on Tuesday, 02 June 2009 12:34
 


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