The Tamil Nadu Govt on Monday Nov 11,2013 moved the Supreme Court for a direction to the Centre to constitute the Cauvery Management Board as per the final award of the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal to ensure strict implementation of the award.
The State, in its application, said Chief Minister
Jayalalithaa in her letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on September
2, stated inter-alia about Karnataka’s plan to construct a hydro-power
station at Mekedatu. For this purpose, three reservoirs were planned
across Cauvery river near Mekedatu.
“Karnataka is
proposing to utilise the surplus water of the Hemavathy and the
Krishnarajasagar reservoirs at an estimated cost of Rs.500 crore to
Rs.600 crore for drinking water schemes,” Ms. Jayalalithaa said in the
application.
She stated that the proposed reservoirs
near Mekedatu were new schemes not contemplated in the Final Order of
the Tribunal. Therefore, the proposal of Karnataka, besides being wholly
illegal, was causing great alarm and apprehension in Tamil Nadu, as it
would affect the flow of Cauvery river considerably and will severely
affect irrigation in Tamil Nadu. She emphasised the need for setting up
the CMB.
The stand of Karnataka that “there is no
impediment in executing the scheme of construction of a reservoir as the
Final Order has been notified is wholly untenable and against all
principles of federalism. In a federal structure, no upper riparian
State can unilaterally interfere with the natural flow of an inter-State
river without the consent and concurrence of the lower riparian State.
Further,
the proposal of Karnataka to modernise the Hemavathy canals with
funding assistance under the Accelerated Irrigation Benefit Programme
will result in increased drawal of water by Karnataka and expansion of
Ayacut to an extent that is more than what has been allocated by the
Final Order of the Tribunal, besides affecting the natural flow of the
river and consequently seriously affecting the irrigation interests of
Tamil Nadu.”
The Karnataka Chief Secretary in his
letter dated 30.10.2013 to the Tamil Nadu Chief Secretary stated that
the Final Order “does not bar Karnataka from constructing projects in
the Cauvery basin for utilisation of available water; after ensuring to
Tamil Nadu 192 tmc ft annually in a normal year at Biligundlu it has the
right to use surplus water or salvaged water by savings.”
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