Residents of around 25 villages recently stopped the public hearing for a
proposed methane extraction project. The 500-odd people from Gharghonda *
tehsil* in Raigarh, armed with the Centre for Science and Environment's
report on the project's environment impact assessment (eia), said the
eiawas weak and proceedings were not transparent.

With the public hearing stopped, the case now rests with the Union Ministry
of Environment and Forests, said R K Sharma, regional officer, Chhattisgarh
Environment Conservation Board.

Australia-based Arrow Energy, with gail India and Energy Infrastructure
Group, a Swedish company, plan to explore methane over 643 sq km in Raigarh
and Korba districts.

The public hearing, mandatory for environmental clearance, was conducted on
November 11. Residents of villages under Gharghonda termed the hearing
"illegal".

"According to the eia Notification, 2006, proceedings of a hearing should be
conducted within 45 days of an eia report being submitted to the state
pollution control board. The company had submitted the report in June, the
45-day period is long over," says Rajesh Tripathy of Jan Chetna Manch, a
local ngo. After people walked out of the meeting midway, the additional
district collector of Raigarh had to call off the proceedings. Activists
allege they were not informed of the hearing and claimed ignorance on the
project.


Pollution fears
The Centre for Science and Environment (cse) study shows that the project,
at its production stage, may impact hydrology, agriculture and biodiversity
adversely. It notes that the water that comes out when methane is extracted
is highly polluted but the eia makes no mention of this.

Called coal-bed methane water, it is saline and comprises fluorides and
heavy metals. Such water has a high sodium absorption ratio—a measure of
sodium concentration in soils relative to that of calcium and
magnesium—which goes up to 31.

The prescribed limit for sodium absorption ratio is 26 for effluents or
wastewater. Anything above 26 is bad news for crops because excess salts
affect plants physically and chemically.

The eia report does not assess the damage the project will cause due to
construction of pipelines and roads; and storage of methane and disposal of
coal-bed methane water.

It is feared that the project will cause surface and groundwater
contamination and affect groundwater availability when the exploration wells
produce methane on a commercial scale.

Methane is inflammable. Risk assessment and disaster management plans thus
become very important because a majority of the land through which pipelines
will pass is under forests occupied by human habitation. The eia report has
failed to assess the risk associated with storage of methane and pipelines
when production beings on a commercial scale. It does discuss some risks
associated with exploration but it is at the production stage that the
project will affect the environment.


Inconsistent EIA
Raghuveer Pradhan of Ekta Parishad, a grassroots organization protesting the
project, said information on land use and forest cover was inconsistent. The
cse study found the executive summary of the eia report pegs forest area at
8 per cent of the total land; the soft copy of the report at 33.63 per cent
and the hard copy at 34.8 per cent.

Statistics on water are also contradictory: the executive summary says water
bodies in the area constitute 0.2 per cent of the total land; the eia report
puts the figure at 6.62 per cent.

The eia claims absence of rare and endangered animals in the area but
animals such as leopards, bears and elephants are found in the forests
there. Leopards are declared endangered and bears fall under the category of
animals that need immediate protection.

There is also no mention of an existing elephant corridor in the area, which
will be affected if the project is given the go-ahead.
downtoearth.org.in/full6.asp?foldername=20071231&filename=news&sec_id=4&sid=6

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