Author: Ravi Ladduwahetty
Publication: The Nation
Date: April 22, 2007
URL: http://www.nation.lk/2007/04/22/newsfe3.htm
An eminent 34- member advisory group of Sri
Lankan professionals have cautioned that the Sethusamudram canal dredging
project could have disastrous environment impacts, particularly, maritime
environment, for Sri Lanka.
What is most disconcerting is the absence
of any response from the Indian Government to the Lankan concerns.
The Group, after a year's study, submitted
their report to Foreign Secretary Dr. Palitha Kohona, earlier this month.
The Experts Group comprised Secretary, Education
Ministry Ariyaratne Hewage - Chairman, Peradeniya University Professor of
Geography Shantha Hennayake - Deputy Chairman, Special Advisor, Technical
Planning & Development, Sri Lanka Ports Authority, Prasanna Weerasinghe
and Systems Advisor, Sethusamudram Ship Canal Project (SSCP), Tikiri Jayatilleke.
The Advisory Group was supported by sub committees
from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs headed by Assistant Director Sugeesawara
Gunatunga, on hydrodynamic modeling headed by Moratuwa University's Prof of
Coastal Engineering Samantha Hettiarachchi, on Environmental Measures for
Sustainability headed by the Director, Institute of Technological Studies,
Dr Aziz Mubarak, including IUCN Ecologist Dr. Channa Bambaradeniya and Head
of Oceanography, NARA, K. Arulananthan, on Fisheries Resources & Livelihood,
headed by Head of Marine Biological Resources, NARA, Dr Champa Amarasiri and
on Navigational Emergencies headed by Commander Y.N. Jayaratne, Sri Lanka
Navy.
The primary concern for Sri Lanka is that
the initial dredging, the infinite maintenance dredging and subsequent shipping
through the channel, could have negative impacts on Sri Lanka's maritime and
environment resources, sources in the Advisory Group told The Nation yesterday.
Another major Sri Lankan concern which also
relates to environment resources, is that the Indian studies have not taken
into account the single environment impact on the Sri Lankan side of the international
boundary, they said.
The Advisory Group is of the view that, despite
the SSCP being located only one mile away from the Indian side of the maritime
boundary, the impact is unlikely to remain only on the Indian side and that,
Sri Lanka's concerns have become even more significant, in the light of insufficient
attention paid to minimise the environmental aspects on the Lankan side of
the boundary.
The Advisory Group has also noted that the
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) carried out by India is inadequate for
a number of reasons.
The Nation in its edition of January 7, 2007,
exclusively reported that, despite the Indian assertion (Commercial Counsellor,
Indian High Commission, Colombo, Sanjay Sudhir refers) that it has shared
the Ahamedabad based Indian National Environment & Ecological Research
Institute (NEERI) report with Sri Lanka, is insufficient justification to
prove that there will be no adverse impact on the environment. Simply because,
the NEERI report by itself, was flawed and was sufficient legal justification
to put the entire NEERI repot into scientific question.
For example, the NEERI report is yet to explain
the sedimentation issue, silting possibilities and underwater ocean currents,
when the canal is constructed.
According to Sudharshan Rodriguez, a Chennai
based conservation analyst, the EIA report furnished by NEERI, has used secondary
data going back to 1976. "Hence, how can a project, which will pass through
a biological hot spot, with so many likely impacts, be assessed on the basis
of secondary data?" is the next most logical question.
The Convenor, Indian Coastal Action Network,
Ossie Fernandez has alleged that the NEERI EIA report is also a re-hash of
the preliminary report and that, many activists and professionals are querying
the data sources, including the bio diversity readings.
Furthermore, there would be increased turbidity,
which has never been studied by NEERI, which has neither studied the possibility
of a tsunami through the canal water flow, due to the deep water channel linking
the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal.
The United Nations Law of the Sea mandates
that neighbouring States need to be consulted and sufficient safeguards and
guarantees provided.
Fishery resources
There is also concern of the lack of concern
on the Indian side, of the unique, biologically rich resource areas linking
two Marine Eco systems in the Gulf of Mannar and the Palk Bay. Unless accurate
forecasts are made of the mitigation effects, it could eventually destroy
this fragile marine eco system. This is all the more significant in the light
of the Northern and North western communities in Sri Lanka being heavily dependent
on the fisheries resources of this area.
The concerns that Sri Lanka has expressed
are protecting the endangered species, protecting the fisheries resources,
the coastal and maritime eco diversity system, integrity of the eco system
in the seas around the island and immediate and long-term ecological stability.
According to research done in Jaffna, by Sri
Lanka born Monash University's Professor of Systems Ecology and UNDP Consultant
Prof. Ranil Senanayake, fresh water fish such as Dandiya (Rasbora Daniconius),
Tittaya (Amblypharygnodon Melenittus) and Amblypharygnodon Melenittus, migrate
down towards underground caverns and chambers, during dry weather and surface
when it rains. This also demonstrates the existence of massive underground
freshwater caves off Jaffna, with which the salt water of the Palk Straits
would mix, if the dredging continues.
This is a shallow area which is highly productive,
biologically. As a consequence to the dredging, rare species of mammals, dugongs
and fish and invertebrates such as the guitar shark and cone shells would
become extinct. One cone shell (Conus Zonatus and Conus Gloria Maris) is worth
around US$ 3,500 apiece.
Dredging will also reduce the photosynthetic
rate, resulting in the collapse of the fishing industry.
Ecological and archaeological concerns
Among a host of serious problems, one major
issue is that the canal is to be dug through vesicular limestone, which is
a formation of limestone, consequent to the myocene sea encroaching upon parts
of Northern Sri Lanka and Southern India. This entails Mannar and Jaffna on
the Sri Lankan side and Tuticorin and Rameswaran on the Indian side, which
means that the groundwater on both sides of the channel, would be affected.
It is also salient that no maritime archaeology
has been conducted on this site. Scientific evidence, in a paper presented
by Prof. Senanayake, indicates that 13,000-years ago, the area around the
Kalpitiya lagoon, up to Mannar, was forested. Even today, stumps of old trees
are found underwater.
There are innumerable stories in Sinhala history,
regarding noblemen and royalty living underwater.
Navigational Emergencies
Sri Lanka has proposed that a plan to ensure
vessels that cause pollution and oil spillage are identified and necessary
compensation mechanisms put in place, is established. Sri Lanka should, invariably,
be involved in the preparation of contingency plans for oil spills, including
modalities to work out the cost of marine pollution and other navigational
emergencies and how they be met.
Recommendations
Sri Lanka has also proposed the sharing of
information on existing studies and collaboration on further studies and assessments
and the setting up of a common database. Also that a Joint Environment Management
Plan for impact assessment and monitoring of the project area be established.
Both Sri Lanka and India will be tremendously
benefited if the recommendations are implemented to minimize the adverse environmental
impacts of the SSCP, the Advisory Group has pointed out.