The Assam Tribune

Saturday, February 18, 2012

http://www.assamtribune.com/scripts/showpage.asp?id=feb1812,6,417,111,996,804

Subansiri River Water Dispute Tribunal 

Sanjib Baruah

The Ministry of Water Resources has now on its website the draft National Water 
Policy 2012.  Parts of the document may surprise those following the debates on 
Lower Subansiri. Some of the ideas are fully in line with what the protesters 
are saying about how decisions ought to be made on mega dams.

The statement that “public agencies in charge of taking water related decisions 
tend to take these on their own without consultation with stakeholders” could 
have been easily written by one of the protest leaders.   Most protesters would 
also welcome the idea spelt out in the draft National Water Policy that a river 
basin or sub-basin should become the unit “for planning, development and 
management of water resources.”
 
The draft national water policy is the latest in India’s ongoing efforts to 
comprehensively reform the rules, laws and institutions governing the country’s 
water sector. The growing pressure on fresh water resources -- expected to get 
worse with climate change – is driving these reforms.  It is widely recognized 
that the rules and laws made in an era of water surplus are inadequate for 
meeting contemporary challenges.  Moreover the gigantic scale of  some projects 
that are now under construction, or are on the drawing board, such as the large 
hydropower dams in remote mountains or inter-basin water transfer projects, 
could not have been anticipated when the rules of the old water use regime were 
written.  

Do the anticipated changes in the water use regime explain the extraordinary 
speed in which Arunachal Pradesh is moving to develop its hydropower potential? 
 How else would one explain what the former Minister for the Environment Jairam 
Ramesh had described in 2008 as a “MOU virus” – the mad scramble to sign 
memorandums of understanding with private parties to build hydropower projects? 
Central government entities too have often provided clearances for these 
projects with remarkable haste – treating procedures such as public 
consultations as perfunctory.   Is there an attempt to create realities on the 
ground before India’s rules on water use are redefined?  It is little surprise 
that a region which has plenty of water for now is fast turning into a major 
site of water conflicts. 

Whatever form India’s future water use regime may take, in the foreseeable 
future the antiquated water use regime will continue to provide the framework 
for decision-making.  The people of Assam will have to live with the 
consequences of decisions made under a water use regime that the Indian 
government itself evidently regards as fundamentally flawed.  And 
unfortunately, at least for the moment Assam has little choice but to find ways 
of redressing its grievances within the rules of the existing water use regime.
 
Despite disagreements between the Assam state government and the protesters on 
Lower Subansiri,  the two sides seem to agree that the Lower Subansiri project 
will significantly impact the downstream areas of Assam – and that many of the 
effects are going to be negative.   
  
Chief minister Tarun Gogoi has spoken of “a legislation for mitigating the 
downstream impact” and for compensating “the affected people even to the extent 
of three times of their loss."  Power Minister Pradyut Bordoloi has called for 
central legislation to ensure that Assam as the state that would bear most of 
downstream burden of hydropower projects built in Arunachal Pradesh, has a 
voice in the approval of future projects. 

But what are the avenues currently available before the Assam government to 
protect the interests of its citizens? Under the Constitution almost all 
aspects of water, except for an interstate river, is under the exclusive 
control of states. However,  as Supreme Court advocate K.K. Lahiri points out, 
the power to legislate on water “ought not to be confused with ownership or 
proprietary rights and no State has any proprietary rights in river waters.”  

The “regulation and development of inter-state rivers and river valleys” is 
under the central government’s jurisdiction.  Article 262 of the Constitution 
says that “parliament may by law provide for the adjudication of any dispute or 
complaint with respect to the use, distribution or control of the waters of, or 
in, any Inter-State river or river valley.”  Under the Inter-State Water 
Disputes Act of 1956 [ISWDA] states can file complaints when differences arise 
between two or more States on “the use, distribution or control of the waters 
of, or in, any inter-State river or river valley.”  If the dispute cannot be 
settled by negotiations, the central government can create a tribunal to 
adjudicate the dispute.  

The parliament according to Article 262 can make laws excluding inter-state 
water disputes from the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court or any other court.  
In 2010 the Gauhati High Court refused to admit a Public Interest Litigation 
petition on the Lower Subansiri project citing  a Supreme Court verdict that 
Article 262 of  Constitution read along with the Inter-State Water Disputes Act 
of 1956 “categorically bars the jurisdiction” of all courts in river disputes 
“referable to a tribunal.” In support of its decision the High Court also cited 
a Supreme Court ruling saying that the ISWDA allows only a state government to 
raise an inter-State water dispute: “individuals or groups of individuals are 
not given any right to raise water disputes.” 

The law however, said the Gauhati High Court “does not bar the right of the 
petitioner to ventilate the grievance” before the Government of Assam and 
convince the government “that the petitioner has genuine grievance, which is 
required to be attended. The Government of Assam, if so convinced that the 
grievance of the petitioner is required to be attended, there is nothing which 
prohibits the state of Assam from seeking a reference under the provisions of 
the law.”  

The protests against mega dams in Assam since then seem to be following this 
script suggested by the Gauhati High Court.  

In the case of Lower Subansiri, given its publically expressed concerns, the 
Assam government may have no other alternative than to file a complaint under 
the ISWDA.  But the ISWDA does not cover single-state rivers.  Even though 
other dams on Arunachal’s rivers may have significant negative impact on Assam, 
the state has no means of seeking redress under India’s current water use 
regime.  But a Subansiri River Water Dispute Tribunal might slow down the mad 
rush to dam the Himalayan rivers. 

While some may say that such a slowdown would be bad for India’s development, 
to borrow the words of Ramaswamy Iyer, Former Secretary of Water Resources and 
one of India’s major authority on the subject, “major interventions in nature 
with serious impacts and consequences ought not to have an easy passage to 
approval; . . . a degree of ‘delay’ and ‘difficulty’ is necessary and salutary.”
 
Sanjib Baruah is Visiting Professor, Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi and 
Professor of Political Studies, Bard College, New York. 

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