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Tunnel leakage in Holi project looms landslide danger : Report

The designing of  180 mega Watt Holi hydropower project in ecological frigile Bharmour Subdivision of Chamba district in Himachal Pradesh, without conducting geological survey looming dangers to a village due to recent leakage in the diversion Tunnel, a report published by proenivrinment group warned
The Himdhara Environment Collective today released a fact-finding report about  recent landslides and damage caused to houses due to construction of 180 MW Bajoli-Holi Hydroelectric Project in Chamba district.
Report copy of which is with us said that Tunnel testing of Holi hydroelectric project again triggered danger, landslides and danger to homes due to leakage in the tunnel.
Himdhara and local people were Protesting against this project since time of conceiving or planning of this project.
The villagers had warned the government and the company about the fragile ecology of the area during allotment of this project.

 Members of Himdhara claimed that it had fact documenting the environmental impacts of number of major development projects for the past decade and study conducted by the collective predicted catastrophic disasters.
A team of collective visited affected Jadhota village in Holi panchayat of Bharmour tehsil of Chamba district on January 3-4, 2022 to study the impact caused by leakage in the diversion Tunnel as it was warned by the villagers in the last week of December.
The reports said that the incidents of water leakage started around December 17 to 19.  After about two weeks, the leakage and landslide continued and the local people said that the administration and the company management did not take any concrete steps. 
  “The purpose of our visit was to collect evidence and opinion from the residents of Jadhota villagers located near the project tunnel site regarding cracks in residential houses and private/forest land”.
 Vivek Negi, a member of the fact-finding team, said, “ team reached the affected site in the afternoon of January 3. 
The fact finding team saw a worker vacating his shed, which was hit by a landslide, near the Holi-Chamba road in the foothills of Jadota village. 

 A house was under construction near it. Water was seeping from above and the ground could be seen rolling down, stones rolling. Another family was vacating their house on January 4 due to increasing landslide  “.
 He added that “According to local statements, people first noticed the leak on the left side of the village on 19th December.
 After that more leakage was seen, landslides became active, cracks started appearing. Obviously, people were upset but  by the time we reached the affected place, the leakage was on, people didn’t know whether the testing has been stopped or not”. 
 A committee was constituted by the administration under the chairmanship of the Naib Tehsildar to assess the damage on the same day. 
 Angry Jadhota residents demanded that the project work be stopped immediately and a team of security experts be sent to the area.
 As per the report’s recommendation, it is one thing to assess the damage done, but it is extremely important to investigate the hazards in the rest of the area in the near future and the Directorate of Energy should immediately send a team of safety experts to the affected site,  report is recommended.  
Manshi Ashar of Himdhara Environment Group said that in 2014, the women of Holi Panchayat organized a Dharna for a month on the same area where the leak first started.
 The Women  were agitated to  change the design of project tunnel from right side of Ravi river to left side. It is worth mentioning that right side is barren land while left side is populated and forested area. People had warned administration and officials about it.  
The ecology of this area is very delicate and the tunnel construction would result in loss of life and property but the administration has not paid any attention to it,” Manshi added.
 This is not the first incident of its kind, these hazards remain at every stage of the project – due to heavy explosions, during construction, during testing and even long after commissioning, local residents alleged.
  “Once the slopes are destabilized and the ecology and geo-structure of the area is disturbed, there is bound to be an impact, but all this should have been observed during the planning and impact assessment phase.  The focus is only on getting approval”. report pointed out.

 A 2015 study by the State Disaster Management Authority (SDMA) also warned that in the state, 56 per cent of hydroelectric projects are at serious risk of landslides. Therefore, any carelessness at the time of planning and impact assessment is bound to have disastrous consequences. 
 Environmental impact assessment reports prepared for hydroelectric projects often fail to make a realistic assessment, ignoring the potential for landslides, seismic issues or the impacts of the area’s disaster potential, Himdhara pointed v
 In the case of Bajoli-Holi Hydroelectric Project also, the affected area, Bharmour area, falls under very high landslide vulnerability zone as per GSI mapping.
 On the one hand the community has to face continuous loss of livelihood and resources, on the other hand the trauma caused by such dangers and risks makes their situation worse.
  Upkar Singh of Himdhara Environment Group says that “apart from ensuring accountability of project officials and introducing safety measures, the administration should ensure that all benefits of the rehabilitation and resettlement package are immediately given to the people of Jadhota”.

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