A special resolution moved by Tamil Nadu Chief Minister
Jayalalithaa, opposing Kerala’s Attappady Valley irrigation project on
the Siruvani River, was unanimously passed by the State Assembly on
Friday Sep 02,2016
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa moved the resolution urging
the Centre not to accept the recommendations of the committee formed by
the Environment Ministry, allowing Kerala to conduct an Environmental
Impact Assessment (EIA) for the project.
“Also, till
the time the Cauvery Management Board and the Cauvery Water Regulation
Committee come into force, and judgments are delivered in the cases at
the courts, we urge the Centre to not permit the Kerala and Karnataka
governments to undertake any project in the Cauvery basin,” the
resolution said.
Siruvani is
an inter-State river and a sub-tributary of the Cauvery. Even the
Cauvery Water Tribunal had included both the Siruvani and the Bhavani
river basins while calculating the share of water, the resolution said.
The
resolution recalled the measures taken by Ms. Jayalalithaa who, in
2012, had written to then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh urging the
Centre to not allow Kerala’s proposal to build a dam on the Siruvani
River under the Attappady Valley irrigation project.
“The Chief Minister had requested the Centre to not allow the project
till a final award of the Cauvery Tribunal was published in the Central
gazette and cases filed in the courts were completed,” the resolution
said.
“The Kerala government, in September 2013, was
asked to get the consent of the respective State governments in the
Cauvery river basin by the Ministry of Water Resources, and then seek
the nod of the Cauvery Tribunal.”
EAC recommendation
In
March 2016, the Expert Appraisal Committee (EAC) of the Ministry of
Environment, Forest and Climate Change, asked Kerala to solicit the
views of the Tamil Nadu government, on its request to approve the
Standard Terms of Reference to undertake the EIA.
The
Committee had said the plea would be taken up only after Tamil Nadu’s
opinion on the matter was received, according to the resolution.
“However, on August 11 and 12, the EAC recommended that approval for
undertaking the EIA can be given to Kerala,” the resolution said, adding
that this was contrary to the directions of the Water Resources
Ministry in 2013 and the EAC’s stand in March 2016.”
Also,
the EAC had said the Tamil Nadu government had not responded to any of
the letters sent by the Environment Ministry, which “is contradictory to
the truth.”
All political parties extended support
to the resolution. DMK deputy leader in the Assembly Duraimurugan said
an all-party delegation could meet the Prime Minister and defend the
State’s interest.
The resolution was passed unanimously by voice vote.
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