TN activists seek open debate on Kudankulam

Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation Limited (TANGEDCO) officials said about 800 MW is pumped out of KKNPP

shivani

Shivani Chaturvedi | June 7, 2014



The Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project (KKNPP) in Tamil Nadu still remains controversial. With the NDA-led BJP agreeing to go ahead with the project, a section of people in Tamil Nadu demanded open debate on the power plant project.

M G Devasahayam, a retired civil servant and energy policy expert, who also heads the independent expert's panel supported by people's movement against nuclear energy (PMANE) in Kudankulam, has expressed serious concern over safety aspects of KKNPP. He said, “You don’t have many resources. Influenced peddlers are moss or less the same. People in Kudankulam have no voice.” 

However, a senior BJP leader L Ganesan said, “I don’t think there is any problem with the project. Those who have objected to it have vested interest.”  

“We have not gone commercial yet. But we are connected to the Southern Grid and whenever power is generated, a part of it goes to Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Puducherry and Karnataka. Andhra Pradesh never asked for power at the time when the agreement was signed, so we are not providing power to them,” said KKNPP site director R S Sundar.

Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation Limited (TANGEDCO) officials said about 800 MW is pumped out of KKNPP.

 “If BJP wants to go ahead they should have a nation-wide discourse and analysis. There should be a review on what has been achieved so far in the nuclear programme in the past 50 years, how much money has been spent on the programme? The PM should here out from people who’re both pro-nuclear and anti-nuclear,” he said.  

Moreover, there should be a competitive bidding but nuclear power doesn’t come for a bid at all since the entire funding is subsidised. Bring nuclear power by all means but it should be under a competitive bidding. There shouldn’t be any secrecy behind it,” he added.

In an open letter to prime minister Narendra Modi, activist SP Udayakumar mentions, “The nuclear sector is rampant with corruption, inefficiency and mismanagement. The Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project (KKNPP) is a case in point. The KKNPP administration has bought approximately 48 lakh liters of high speed diesel (HSD) for Rs 26.6 crores in just 11 months in 2013. In November 2013 alone, they bought HSD worth 4.4 crores. Our queries and Right to Information Act (RTI) petitions on the need for HSD for a nuclear power plant have gone unanswered. Similarly, the KKNPP administration has spent a whopping sum of Rs 5.2 crores for medical treatment of their employees for just 17 months (from January 2013 to May 17, 2014). This is only a tip of the iceberg and the government could do well for the country if you could institute an inquiry into the corruption and inefficiency of the department of atomic energy.”

Udayakumar further said, “Is there any kind of health issue that people residing here should have been cautioned of? The KKNPP authorities never alarmed people residing here about health issued because of the ongoing project.”

Comments

 

Other News

When Nandini Satpathy told Biju Patnaik: ‘I’ll sit on the chair you are sitting on’

Nandini Satpathy: The Iron Lady of Orissa By Pallavi Rebbapragada Simon and Schuster India, 321 pages, Rs 765

Elections 2024: 1,351 candidates in fray for Phase 3

As many as 1,351 candidates from 12 states /UTs are contesting elections in Phase 3 of Lok Sabha Elections 2024. The number includes eight contesting candidates for the adjourned poll in 29-Betul (ST) PC of Madhya Pradesh. Additionally, one candidate from Surat PC in Gujarat has been elected unopp

2023-24 net direct tax collections exceed budget estimates by 7.40%

The provisional figures of direct tax collections for the financial year 2023-24 show that net collections are at Rs. 19.58 lakh crore, 17.70% more than Rs. 16.64 lakh crore in 2022-23. The Budget Estimates (BE) for Direct Tax revenue in the Union Budget for FY 2023-24 were fixed at Rs. 18.

‘World’s biggest festival of democracy’ begins

The much-awaited General Elections of 2024, billed as the world’s biggest festival of democracy, began on Friday with Phase 1 of polling in 102 Parliamentary Constituencies (the highest among all seven phases) in 21 States/ UTs and 92 Assembly Constituencies in the State Assembly Elections in Arunach

A sustainability warrior’s heartfelt stories of life’s fleeting moments

Fit In, Stand Out, Walk: Stories from a Pushed Away Hill By Shailini Sheth Amin Notion Press, Rs 399

What EU’s AI Act means for the world

The recent European Union (EU) policy on artificial intelligence (AI) will be a game-changer and likely to become the de-facto standard not only for the conduct of businesses but also for the way consumers think about AI tools. Governments across the globe have been grappling with the rapid rise of AI tool

Visionary Talk: Amitabh Gupta, Pune Police Commissioner with Kailashnath Adhikari, MD, Governance Now


Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter