Tribunal has set aside revocation of environmental clearance to Nirma Limited’s proposed cement plant
Nirma cement plant in Mahuva block of Bhavnagar district of Gujarat (Photo: Sunita Narain)
The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has set aside the environment ministry’s order revoking the environmental clearance to Nirma Limited’s cement plant, proposed to come up at the site of the reservoir Samadhiala Bandhara, in Mahuva block of Gujarat’s Bhavnagar district. The order, delivered by the principal bench of the NGT headed by Justice Swatanter Kumar on January 14, has brought to a frustrating end the local community’s struggle to protect a crucial water body in their area.
In 2008, the Gujarat government had allotted 268 hectares (ha) to Nirma Limited to set up a cement plant with an annual capacity of 1.91 million tonnes. The project was to include the construction of a coke oven plant and a captive power plant. The project was granted environmental clearance on December 11, 2008, based on a rapid Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report submitted in July 2008.
Local residents, however, were strongly opposed to the project as it was to be built over their water body, the Samadhiyala Bandhara, created by damming a local river. The reservoir provides protection from ingress of salinity as well as irrigation in the area.
The project was first challenged in Gujarat High Court, and then, in the Supreme Court. Finally, the environment ministry revoked the project’s environmental clearance on December 1, 2011, stating that clearance was granted based on undisclosed and incorrect information provided by Nirma Limited. It observed that the site of the cement plant was actually a wetland or water body and not a wasteland as argued by the company in its various submissions to the ministry. The cement plant site was, in fact, called “barren land” by the company in the EIA report. There was also no mention about the presence of a large water body.
Nirma didn’t ‘deliberately’ conceal information, says NGT
While Nirma argued that the site of the cement plant was a wasteland, various committees that were set up to evaluate the actual ecological status of the site had confirmed that it was indeed a water body. These included the Shelat Committee and a subcommittee of ministers formed by the Gujarat government in 2009, and in particular, two expert committees, the C K Varshney committee and the C R Babu committee, set up by the environment ministry in 2011.
The NGT said that the environment ministry revoked the clearance to Nirma based on the C R Babu committee report which “recommended classification of the land in question as wetland and water body, and observed that it had manifold ecological utility besides helping recharge of ground water, sustain rich biodiversity, provide pastures and support settlements and as such common property resource”.
In its report, the C R Babu committee had said that “location of Nirma cement plant, captive coal-based power plant and coke oven plant is part of Samadhiyala Bandhara water body and its periphery in the catchment area”. The committee had recommended that “the site of the Nirma cement plant be relocated elsewhere outside Samadhiala Bandhara—a common property resource”.
The green tribunal, however, discounted the merit of such observation and of the contention that the company had provided misleading information while identifying the site as wasteland. To substantiate their decision, the tribunal said that while the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification, 2006, provides for revocation of environmental clearance based on “deliberate concealment and/or submission of false or misleading information”, it reiterated that the act of concealment and/or submission of false or misleading information “should be a deliberate one”.
Instead of dwelling on observations made by other expert committees, the tribunal highlighted the ones made by its own expert members. Justice Kumar ordered NGT experts to conduct two site visits in June and September, 2013, to “decide on the real issues”. Following the June visit, members observed that the Bandhara was completely dry despite 75 mm rainfall over a short period. During a second site visit in September that year, the members noted that the Bandhara was almost full with shallow level depth all over. There was growth of aquatic vegetation and presence of few water/migratory birds. No part of the proposed plant was noted to be under submergence and the adjoining areas beyond the boundaries of the proposed cement plant had shallow water accumulation.
Based on these observations, NGT said that the reservoir “serves as a temporary storage of water, which gets used by farmers or gets evaporated due to its large spread or gets percolated due to fairly high porosity of soil and as such cannot be called as a productive wetland having all perennial features of a wetland”. (See ‘The judiciary and the jury: was inspection by NGT experts necessary?’)
They further emphasised that “the revenue records described the area in question as a wasteland, and it was never, even till today, identified as wetland by the Central Wetlands Regulatory Authority and so notified by the Central Government under the provisions of the Act for the purposes of Wetland (Conservation & Management) Rules, 2010”. With this observation, the bench ruled in favor of the company saying “it is difficult to hold that there was any deliberate concealment and or submission of false or misleading information or data to the authorities” by Nirma Limited.
“The NGT’s order makes it is okay for a project to come up in a water body as long as it has not been notified as a wetland,” says advocate Anand Yagnik, who has also been fighting the case on behalf of the community for many years. “Irrespective of the technical categorisation of the concerned site as a wetland, the issue that should be central is can such a significant water body, from both social and ecological perspectives, be compromised for industrial development,” he adds.
The judiciary and the jury: was inspection by NGT experts necessary?
The additional site visit ordered by NGT became a central point of contention, especially since expert committees had already observed there was a water body/wetland at the site of the proposed plant. But the NGT brushed aside such contention saying that the site visit was required to “bring acuity to the judicial view”.
In February 2013, the tribunal bench headed by Justice Swatanter Kumar stated that “re-evaluation” of the Nirma site by expert members of NGT was necessary. Noting the fact that when the plant comes up the environment will be compromised, he said the matter that needs to be resolved is “whether the site is a water body, and whether the water body is a wetland”. On May 28, 2013, the NGT directed two expert members of the tribunal, D K Agarwal and G K Pandey, to visit the site from June 7-9. Another site visit was conducted in September.
The necessity of “re-evaluation” of the site was heavily contested by both the Union environment ministry and the counsel representing the community. Additional Solicitor General Indira Jaising, who appeared for the environment ministry in the NGT, had argued that “all the committee reports have already recognised that the site is indeed a water body and a wetland.” She had pointed out that all the information that NGT seeks is available with the environment ministry and the Gujarat government and “a site visit at this point is not necessary at all”. The decision to conduct another site visit was, however, welcomed by Dushyant Dave, lawyer for Nirma Limited.
The NGT took a strong view against those questioning the site visit by its members. Earlier in June 2013, the tribunal had imposed a fine of Rs one lakh on Mahuva Bandhara Khetiwadi Paryavaran Bachav Samiti and the ministry, rejecting their plea for a stay on the tribunal's May 28 order for fresh site inspection. In its latest order of January 14, NGT asserted that “the court is not alien to the judicial process and the procedure adopted by the courts”. Materials placed before the tribunal by parties, including the reports of various expert committees, can be “better appreciated in light of the observations made by the expert members for dispensation of justice”, the bench said.
|
NGT slams observations of expert panel
The tribunal, in its latest order, has criticised the C R Babu committee report, saying that “one wonders how Professor Babu committee could document an exhaustive list of birds, presence of endangered vultures and Asiatic lions and could give soil type in two hours of field visit, without any backing of any specific scientific study in relation to the project site”.
On the other hand, the Babu committee states in its report that it undertook the site visit between April 18 and 19, 2011. It says it surveyed the entire water body, interacted with several members of the community, Nirma officials, consultants, and state government officials, and reviewed related documents such as toposheets, contour maps and satellite imageries.
The Varshney committee had also laid emphasis on the wealth of species and multiple ecological utilities of the water body. Its report had noted that the reservoir “possesses all the characteristic features of wetland ecosystem (fresh water body), supporting rich aquatic vegetation composed of different types of aquatic plant species, aquatic birds, fish and amphibians”. The committee had also highlighted the outdated and incorrect information based on which projects are cleared. They had rightly pointed out that in the Nirma case, “revenue records should be changed based on ground realities”, or else “every wetland will be lost in the name of wasteland”.
A defeat of environmental reality
Acquitting Nirma of any wrongdoing, the NGT has now asked the Gujarat State Pollution Control Board to monitor the project for a period of two years to see what “the effects of running of the project on the water body” will be. Such a study is “practically meaningless once the project is allowed”, says lawyer Abhimanyu Shrestha, who was arguing at the NGT on behalf of Mahuva Bandhara Khetiwadi Paryavaran Bachav Samiti.
By allowing Nirma to carry on with the cement plant, the NGT order may have set a precedent for the misappropriation of water bodies in favour of future industrial projects. It has placed more emphasis on archaic land use classification instead of considering repeated observations by experts on the ecological characteristics of the area. The bench has also undermined the very essence of undertaking an environmental impact assessment, which is meant to consider and evaluate the ground ecological and environmental realities of an area and assess the impacts that a project might have on it.
The local community rues that the NGT reduced the debate into “wetland” versus “wasteland”. In fact, the Supreme Court was also cautious about narrowing down the scope of the impact of the project. The apex court, in its order dated September 9, 2011, had clearly noted that “if MoEF (environment ministry) comes to the conclusion that the site allotted to Nirma Limited consisted of water bodies and not wastelands, then the environment clearance dated December 8, 2008, cannot survive. It has to be revoked. In such an eventuality, the question of examining whether project area is a wetland or a water body does not arise”.
The NGT did not reflect on this observation by the Supreme Court, says Yagnik. He also points out that Justice Kumar had served in the Supreme Court bench that had heard the case, and thus, had complete knowledge of the facts on the basis of which the clearance was revoked.
Timeline: the administrative and legal battle
September 2007 Application for environmental clearance sent to Union environment ministry
September 2008 Mahuva residents oppose cement plant at a public hearing
December 2008 Environment ministry grants clearance on basis of rapid environmental impact assessment report which describes the project site as wasteland
March 2009 People’s front moves Gujarat High Court
May 2009 Gujarat government constitutes an expert committee headed by S K Shelat to evaluate situation at project site
August 2009 Following Shelat committee report, a ministerial subcommittee is formed by Gujarat government to give their observations on the report
November 2009 The subcommittee recommends allowing the project, directs Nirma to return 54 ha of acquired land and increase reservoir’s capacity to offset water loss
December 2009 Gujarat High Court accepts decision, orders Nirma to surrender 54 ha of land
March 2010 High court stays construction after petitioners submit satellite images of wetland, but allows it within a month by asking Nirma to surrender additional 46 ha
May 2010 Petitioners move Supreme Court
January 2011 Supreme Court asks union environment ministry to respond. Ministry sets up an expert committee under C K Varshney to inspect the site
February 2011 C K Varshney committee submits its report, notes that Samadhiala Bandhara possesses all the characteristic features of a wetland ecosystem
March 2011 Based on Varshney committee report, ministry issues stop work order. Nirma moves the high court against ministry’s order. High Court turns down its appeal. Ministry forms another expert committee under C R Babu
May 2011 C R Babu committee submits its report, recommending relocation of the plant as it is on a wetland. Ministry issues show-cause notice to Nirma
September 2011 SC asks Nirma to prove that the project site is a wasteland, gives 3 months to respond to ministry’s show-cause notice
December 2011 Ministry scraps environmental clearance granted to the cement plant. SC dismisses the petition after Nirma submits that it will appeal against ministry’s order in the NGT
February 2012 Nirma case moves to NGT
February 2013 NGT decides to reevaluate Nirma site
May, 2013 Order passed by NGT bench, chaired by Justice Swatanter Kumar, asks for Nirma site visit by two expert members of the tribunal
June 3013 First site visit conducted by NGT expert members
September 2013 Second site visit conducted by NGT expert members
January 2015 NGT deliver final judgment, sets aside the revocation order of environment ministry
|