Monthly Archive for January, 2008

Fasting in front of KSEB Office on 29thJan08

An Action Council consisting of 251 members were constituted with the determination to go ahead with the activities against the Hydro Electric Project at Athirappilly.A General Council with 251 members, Executive Committee with 51 members and Steering Committee with 22 members were formed

Dr.Sukumar Azheekkode, Smt.Sugathakumari, Sri.V.M.Sudheeran and Smt.Sara Joseph are the Patrons of the Council.

The members of the Steering Committee are Sri.T.U.Radhakrishnan (Congress I), Sri.C.L.Chakkunni(CPI), Sri.Eugin Moreli (Janatha Dal) Sri.T.J.Antu (BJP),Sri.Biju S (NCP), Sri.K.A.Unnikrishnan (SNDP), Sri.E.S.George (CPI ML), Fr.John Kavalakkat (BLM), Smt.Leena Davis (Chalakudi Block Panchayath President), sri.Ananda Bhavan (Kerala Sasthra Sahithya Parishad), Sri.Sreedharan Therambil (PUCL), Sri.K.M.Harinarayanan (NSS), Sri. Faisal (Solidarity), Sri.Thomson (CLC), Sri.Joy Kaitharath (Human Rights Organisation),
Sri.Varghese Thodumparambil (Karshaka Munnettam), Sri.P.G.Sivankutty (FasPady), Sri.P.K.Dharmaraj (Jaiva Karshaka Samithi), Sri.Gopi (Merchants Association), Sri.E.J.Chacko (CPF) and Sri.M.Mohandas (CPF). Sri.Mohandas is the Convenor of the Action Council.The first meeting of the Steering Committee decided to conduct a fasting by 101 persons on 29.01.2008 in front of KSEB Office.

On 1.02.2008 the Steering Committee will meet and decide on the future actions of the council.

Nature camp of Yuva kala saahithi

We are glad to inform you that Yuva Kala Saahithi is conducting a State level Nature Campt at Athirappilly on 26th and 27th of January, 2008.The inaugural function of the camp will take place on 26th at Vazhachal Forest Dormitory Complex, Vazhachal. Ssri.P.K.Gopi, State President of the Organization will inaugurate the camp.

A discussion on protection of Chalakudy river is planned in the function in which the subject will be presented by Sri.S.P.Ravi, Convenor, Chalakudyriver Protection Forum. The discussion will be led by Sri.Rajaji Mathew Thomas MLA Chairman, State Legislative Nature Committee and Sri.N.C.Mammootty, Patron, Yuva Kala Saahithi. Eminent personalities from all walks of life will participate in the discussion.

The State Committee meeting of the organization will take place on 27th 2007 at Forest Dormitory, Vazhachal. At 9 am will be the time for Athirappally-Vazhachal Biodiversity ‘yathra’.

At 10.am, the participants of the meeting will take the Athirappilly Protection Oath, the venue of which is near the Athirappilly waterfalls. The oath will be led by Sri.Alankode Leelakrishnan.

Many eminent persons will talk on the occasion.

In the evening at 4 pm, there will be an Eco-cultural get-together at Athirappilly centre. The function will be inaugurated by Sri.C.N.Jayadevan, Secretary, CPI, Trichur District.

A policy decision will be stated by Dr.Vallikkavu Mohandas. Sri.C.R.Neelakandhan will talk on the occasion. Important speakers on the occasion are Sri.K.P.Ramanunni, Sri.Kureeppuzha Sreekumar, Sri.Alankode Leelakrishnan, Sri.Gaayathri, SriM.M.Sacheendran, Adv.Radhakrishanan Perumbilla, Sri.Chavara K.S.Pilla, Adv.A.Jayasankar, Sri.S.P.Ravi, Dr.A.Latha, Dr.O.K.Muraleekrishnan, SriT.K.Ramakrishnan, Sri.V.S.Prince, Adv.B.Bindu. All are invited for the programme

For viewing the notice and poster of the meeting please visit http://picasaweb.google.com/riverprotection/NatureCampOfYuvaKalaSahithi

Nadeethada Convention at Chalakudy on 23.01.2008

As part of the struggle by Chalakudyriver Protection Forum and various socialand political organisations, against the Athirappilly Hydro Electric Project, Nadeethada Convention (River valley convention) was organized on 23.01.2008 at Vyapara Bhavan, Chalakudy.Sri.Mullanezhi, famouse poet inaugurated the convention. He also recited a poem “Avasanatha Abhayam”

The Forum in its statement asked the Government to fill the Kerala Sholayar resorvoir as per the Parambikulam-Aliyar Agreement on February 01. The authorities were asked to regularise the electricity generation at Peringalkuthu so that water is available without interruption for the agriculture and other needs of the people downstreams.

The convention was presided over by Sri.K.K.Shelly. Sri.S.P.Ravi, Sri.U.V.Thomas, Sri.K.A.Unnikrishnan, Sri.sajan K Thomas, Fr.Davis Kizhakkumthala, Sri.T.V.Somasundara Panicker, Smt.Leena Davis, Sri.Sreedharan Therambil, Sri.Rajesh Appat, Sri.C.L.Chakkunni, Sri.Ananda Bhavan, Adv.Biju S Chirayath, Sri.Varghese Thoduparambil, Sri.P.M.Pushpangadan, Sri.E.S.George, Sri.PK.Dhanaraj, Sri.V.S.Balan, Sri.P.G.Sivankutty Sri.Gopan Kattur, Sri.P.S.Bhasi and Sri.Raghavan Mulangadan talked in the convention

Visit http://picasaweb.google.com/riverprotection/RivervalleyConvention for photos of the function

CPI IS AGAINST IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ATHIRAPPILLY PROJECT

Greetings from Chalakudiriver Protection Forum

Dear friends,

I give below the report appeared in The Hindu on 08.1.2008 stating that they are against the implementation of the project, which is as follows

CPI against going ahead with Athirappilly project

 

Staff Reporter

C.N. Jayadevan new Thrissur district secretary



Thrissur: The CPI will strongly oppose the LDF government’s reported move to go ahead with the 163 MW Athirappilly hydel project, CPI district secretary C.N. Jayadevan has said.

Mr. Jayadevan was unanimously selected for the post at the party district conference in Guruvayur on Sunday.

“I do not think the LDF government will construct the dam considering the protests against the project,” he said, addressing a press conference here on Monday.

He said the CPI district conference had discussed possible reunification of Communist parties.

In resolutions adopted at the conference, the party demanded approval of new railway lines, availability of water for paddy cultivation, a medical university in Thrissur, better cancer treatment facilities in Thrissur Medical College, measures to check price rise and steps to make clay available under strict conditions to tile factories.

Asked to comment on veteran Marxist leader Jyoti Basu’s reported statement that capitalism had its own role in the development process, Mr. Jayadevan said that the former West Bengal Chief Minister’s remarks were misinterpreted.

“What he said was that there were limitations in implementing Marxist-Leninist principles in a capitalist development programme the country pursued,” Mr. Jayadevan said.

A 51-member district committee was also formed at the district conference on Sunday.

Fifty-two members were selected to represent the district at the State conference in March.

In all, 305 delegates attended the conference.

As many as 10,000 party workers took part in the meetings.
You can check the following link for reading the article

http://www.hindu.com/2008/01/08/stories/2008010853340300.htm

For reading the reports appeared in some of the malayalam newspapers, please check the following link

http://picasaweb.google.com/riverprotection/CPIISAGAINSTTHEATHIRAPPILLYPROJECT

with regards

murari for Chalakudiriver Protection Forum

Stubborn assault

Greetings from Chalakudiriver Protection Forum

Please read the article appeared on 23.12.2007 in Hindu

ECOWATCH

Stubborn assault

AKBER AYUB

A seventh dam across the Chalakudy may sound the death-knell of the river.

Photo: Akber Ayub

Reduced to a trickle: Will the river survive?

The air is filled with birdsong. Underneath, the gurgling river tries to keep pace. A gentle breeze through the bamboo adds the rustle of crisp, spiky leaves to the medley. The resulting symphony is magical.

Some 75 km northwest of Kochi is the trading town of Chalakudy. And a short 25 km along the winding inter-state road flows the river that carries its name. Another few km and you are at the Athirampilly falls where water roars over a rocky knoll in white, effervescent waves thundering down nearly 45 metres. One November morning, the river is swollen and flows at a brisk pace, about 70 meandering miles from its twin sources — the higher reaches of the Annamalai hills in Tamil Nadu and the exquisite Parambikulam plateau in Kerala.

Then you realise that this might be the last time you may see this scene: if need for ‘progress’ overrides essential humanness; if, in utter disregard to all known facts, the proposed Chalakudy hydel project is implemented — the seventh along the 145 km journey of the already heavily dammed river. The Government of Kerala is planning this dam just upstream of the enchanting Vazhachal rapids and five km upstream of the falls. The immediate likely upshot? The 23m high dam, part of the Athirampilly Hydro Electric Project with an installed capacity of a paltry 163 MW, will drown another 140 hectares of prime forest land.

The steep gradient of the Chalakudy basin makes it technically suitable for hydroelectric dams and subsequent diversion of water to other river basins. Of the six dams already constructed on its tributaries, four were built by Tamil Nadu and two by Kerala. Of the four dams built by TN, three are located in Kerala and have the sole purpose of diverting water (nearly 16tmc.ft) from the Chalakudy to the plains of Tamil Nadu for irrigation and power generation under the Parambikulam-Aliyar Project.

This complex multi-purpose, multi-river, inter-State, inter-basin water-sharing project diverts water from the upper reaches of the three major west flowing rivers of Kerala namely the Periyar, the Chalakudy and the Bharathapuzha to the eastern state of Tamil Nadu. This treaty — based on the illusion of surplus water in Kerala rivers and political pressures — has sounded the death knell of major rivers in Kerala including the iconic Bharathapuzha or Nila.

Projects on the river

Apart from the six dams, there are other major irrigation projects of weirs, diversion canals, augmentation projects, water diversion schemes and regulator dams constructed by various gram panchayats, which have combined to disrupt the river’s natural behaviour. While some tributaries have stopped flowing completely below the dams due to the complete diversion of water; others, like the Sholayar tributary, have been transformed into a chain of reservoirs.

Since minimum flow has not been ensured, and the discharge from the six dams fluctuates heavily, there is a huge variation in the river flow in the monsoon and non-monsoon periods leading to flash floods that cause incalculable damage downstream in the form of erosion and crop damages, not to mention damage to aquatic life. And now comes the proposed scheme to build one more dam.

The Kerala government and the State electricity board seem bent on going ahead, despite resistance from scientists, NGOs, environmentalists and widespread protests by people along the riparian areas.

Damage

Consider these stark realities: the project has been refused clearance twice over, first by the Ministry of Environment and Forests and then by the Kerala high court owing to violations in assessing environmental impact.

According to environmentalists the Athirampilly project will displace endangered primitive hunter-gatherer tribes; the famed Vazhachal rapids and the Athirampilly falls will lose their glory, severely denting tourism in the region; the decreased flow for almost 20-22 hours in a day (in summer) will imperil the agricultural operations in almost 20,000 hectares of land not to mention the adverse impact on a large number of drinking water schemes …

Repercussions on the riparian flora and fauna are grimmer. The myriad cascades and rapids along the river and its tributaries are ideal habitat for diverse species of fishes.

According to the National Bureau of Fish Genetic Resources (NGFGR), a total of 104 species belonging to 34 families have been recorded here, many critically endangered or vulnerable, making the Chalakudy one of the richest in terms of fish diversity. Ironically, there is a proposal pending to declare the river a fish sanctuary. The 140 hectares of forest doomed to submergence is home to diverse animal species including the Asiatic Elephant and the Great Indian Hornbill. As for flora, the 1704 sq km catchment area is the only remaining riparian forest at this altitude in the entire Western Ghats.

Isn’t there any alternative to this stubborn assault on Nature? The proposed 160 MW accounts for a paltry three per cent of the state’s current electricity production and can be met by other measures. Power available from the existing thermal and hydel power stations are vastly underutilised, often for untenable and illogical reasons. Currently, transmission losses are a whopping 25 to 30 per cent; power theft is among the highest in the state.

There are other alternatives too: the Kerala Sahitya Parishad, after a thorough power audit, reports that Kerala uses 20 million 60W incandescent bulbs for domestic use alone. If five million are replaced with CFL lamps, power saving at the peak-load period would be around 300 MW. Even if distributed free, the total expenditure would be less than Rs. 250 crores as against the Rs. 650 crores and more needed to set up the new hydel station. A differential tariff for peak and non-peak hours will encourage energy conservation measures and reduce peak-hour demand.

Instead of going to the forests with a bulldozer, say experts, exploit sustainable energy sources like solar and wind power. A sensible and environment-conscious approach will throw up many other alternatives.

E-mail the writer at akbersait@yahoo.co.uk

Regards

Murari for Chalakudiriver Protection Forum