Assam Tribune, February 5th 2012.
 
http://www.assamtribune.com/scripts/epaper.asp?id=feb0512/Page6


L.C Jain, Assam and mega dams

Dr. Sanjib Baruah

There are often references to the World Commission on Dams [WCD] and its 2001 
report Dams and Development in the discussions on Lower Subansiri and the other 
hydropower dams in Arunachal Pradesh.   But one rarely hears of one of the 
report’s key authors -- the Commission’s Vice Chair, Gandhian activist and 
economist the late L. C Jain.  
Jain who passed away in November 2010 was once India’s High Commissioner to 
South Africa and a former member of the Planning Commission. 
What makes the absence of any significant reference to Jain surprising in this 
context is that Jain was a well-known friend and well-wisher of Assam and 
Northeast India.  Prior to joining the WCD he chaired the Indian Planning 
Commission’s committee on development options for Assam for putting into effect 
Clause 7 of the Assam Accord.  Indeed in his remembrance essay on Jain 
published in this newspaper, a retired senior civil servant from the region and 
former Tourism Secretary M. P. Bezbaruah calls Jain  a “true friend and 
crusader for the Northeast” known for “his personal advocacy of  NE development 
as one arm to fight the divisive violence.” 
The WCD was established jointly by the World Bank and the World Conservation 
Union (IUCN) in 1997 in response to the controversies over large dams that were 
raging in many parts of the world.  As a major funder of dam building projects, 
the World Bank was at that time embroiled in a number of those controversies.  
The WCD’s mandate was to “review the development effectiveness of large dams 
and assess alternatives for water resources and energy development” and  to 
“develop internationally acceptable criteria, guidelines and standards for the 
planning, design, appraisal, construction, operation, monitoring and 
decommissioning of dams.”  

It is a matter of remarkable good fortune that a person who had Northeast 
India’s best interest in mind and a person who was intimately familiar with the 
developmental challenges of Northeast India’s was a key figure in the WCD.  One 
can venture to guess that Jain’s knowledge of Northeast India had indirectly 
found a place in its deliberations. As a result Dams and Development has 
perhaps more relevance to our region than any such global document.

The 12-member WCD with South Africa´s Water Resources Minister Kader Asmal as 
chair and L.C. Jain as Vice-Chair was designed as what is sometimes called a 
“multi-stakeholder process,” that is it tried to include individuals who are 
"representative of the diversity of perspectives" on the question – that is 
industry representatives and large dam advocates, as well as their opponents.  
The Commission had the support of a full-time professional Secretariat, a 
68-member advisory Forum, and numerous experts from a variety of academic 
disciplines. It built a comprehensive knowledge base of large dams and it 
closely examined many dam projects in different parts of the world and 
consulted extensively with people involved in those projects and those affected 
by them. 

The WCD’s report Dams and Development launched in 2000 by Nelson Mandela 
recognizes that “dams have made an important and significant contribution to 
human development, and the benefits derived from them have been considerable.” 
However, it concludes that  “in too many cases an unacceptable and often 
unnecessary price has been paid to secure those benefits.”  In its view, 
notwithstanding significant gains from such projects--for instance in terms of 
the production of hydropower--a very high social cost have been extracted 
because many dam building projects had failed to recognize the complex nature 
of rivers and river ecosystems.  For instance, the dramatic changes to “rivers, 
watersheds and aquatic ecosystems” and their adverse impact on “downstream 
livelihoods” have been inadequately understood and as a result, thousands who 
depend on river ecosystems have been impoverished because of losing their 
traditions sources of livelihood. 

To ensure that future dam building projects do not extract such a heavy social 
cost, the WCD’s report proposes a policy framework that decisively breaks away 
from the idea that decisions on dams are primarily the domain of technical and 
economic experts.   Consistent with Jain’s bottom-up and participatory view of 
development, the WCD’s report emphasizes the need to ensure that the affected 
people have a chance to make “informed choices” and that they should be active 
parties in negotiations and not just passive victims or beneficiaries.  Dams 
and Development even recommends that dam building decisions should be made only 
with the “free, prior and informed consent” of the people affected by dams and 
that their acceptance of such projects be “demonstrable.”

It will not be hard for anyone familiar with Jain’s work to see the impact of 
his thinking  in Dams and Development. As a Gandhian,  Jain did not like 
centralisation of power. Despite being a member of the Planning Commission 
himself,  Jain has gone on record to say that in “more than 60 years after 
Independence, centralised planning had not made a dent on poverty.” He 
complained about power in India being “concentrated in the Bhawans of New 
Delhi: Yojana Bhawan, Rail Bhawan, Udyog Bhawan, Krishi Bhawan,” adding that 
“we have forgotten to build the Janata Bhawan.”  Jain even advocated the 
dissolution of India's Water Resources Ministry and the empowerment of local 
bodies “to embark on a massive rainwater harvesting program” instead.   Jain 
received the Magsaysay Award for “his informed and selfless commitment to 
attack India’s poverty at the grassroots level.” 

We in Assam got a sense of Jain’s faith in participatory development in the 
report on Clause Seven of the Assam Accord. "Our entire thinking,” said the 
report’s introduction, “has been influenced by one major factor: a fairly well 
informed and fervent demand for development for the people at large – students, 
political parties, women’s groups, voluntary organisations, economists, 
ministers, administrators, entrepreneurs – with whom we had the privilege of 
interacting. This magnitude of popular awareness and interest in development is 
a rare social force. Constructively used, it can be the most precious capital 
for the development of Assam." 

That officials in NHPC or the Power or the Water Resources Ministry would find 
WCD’s proposals on how to go about making decisions on building dams 
unacceptable is not surprising.  Dams and Development has been criticized by 
many traditional dam-building experts and enthusiasts of mega hydropower 
projects.  Both India and China, the two countries that have emerged as the 
world’s most prolific dam builders in the 21st century, have rejected the 
report’s recommendations.   

India’s official critique of the report charges that the WCD’s report had made 
“a dam decision subject to veto power of the local people settled on the river 
banks.”  Rather than privileging the preferences of people living in the river 
valleys or those directly impacted by dams, it suggests that “people who are to 
benefit from a project are also to be considered as stakeholder." 

The writer is Professor of Political Studies at Bard College, New York.


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