Banner Advertiser

Saturday, May 30, 2009

[ALOCHONA] Asian Highway, Tipaimukh Dam to jeopardise sovereignty



Asian Highway, Tipaimukh Dam to jeopardise sovereignty
 
Speakers at a roundtable yesterday said that the government wanted to implement the conspiracy of India against the country by allowing the transit and corridor for India in the name of Asian Highway Network and not protesting the construction of Tipaimukh Dam on Borak River at the upper reaches of Surma and Kushiara Rivers.

They called upon the government not to sign the agreement of Asian Highway Network to be connected with AH-1 and AH-2 of Asian Highway route saying that if the government signs the agreement AH-41 avoiding AH-1 and AH-2, the people of the country would not oppose.

Organised by Swadhinata Forum the roundtable on 'Proposed Asian Highway: Responsibility of Bangladesh' was held at the National press Club in the city.

President of the Forum Abu Naser Moshammad Rahmatullah presided over the roundtable while it was addressed among others by BNP leaders and former ministers Dr Khandaker Moharraf Hossain and ASM Hannan Shah, former vice chancellor of Dhaka University Prof Dr Emaj Uddin Ahmed, former adviser to caretaker government Maj Gen (Retd) Ruhul Alam Chowdhury, former Director General of BDR Maj Gen (Retd) ALM Fazlur Rhaman, Journalist Mubaidur Rahman, President of Jatiya Gonotantrik Party Shafiul Alam Prodhan, President of National People's Party (NPP) Sheikh Shawkat Hossain Nilu and General Secretary of Islami Oikkya Jote Moulana Abdul Latif Nejami.

Khandaker Mosharraf said if Bangladesh were connected with Asian Highway route, it would be a threat to the sovereignty of the country.

ASM Hannan Shah called upon the government not to take AH-1 and AH-2 in the interest of the country saying that when the two routes would be completed, India would continue aggression on the country. If it is needed to sign the agreement, the government should hold the referendum, he added.

Prof Emaj Uddin said exactly corridor is being allowed in the name of AH-1 and AH-2 to be connected with Asian Highway route and Bangladesh should not accept the project to protect the country from the aggression of India.

The speakers said if Bangladesh would be connected with the routes, the country would be turned to a free market of Indian goods. It would bring immense losses for Bangladesh, they added.

They also said the country would be turned to battle place of Seven Sisters of India, which are conducting movement for liberation and the Indian central government wants to resist them by using the two routes.




__._,_.___


[Disclaimer: ALOCHONA Management is not liable for information contained in this message. The author takes full responsibility.]
To unsubscribe/subscribe, send request to alochona-owner@egroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

RE: [ALOCHONA] Tipaimukh Dam/Cachar Plain Irrigation Project: A Complicated International Disaster Scenario for Bangladesh





We are bangladeshi, not Indians.
Some of the events specially issue of arm shipment issue is our affair.
India was supplying arms to Shanti Bahine for years that took many bangladeshi life.
The only way to counter that was to help their enemy. why are we trying our citizen?
Did you hear anything about their agents helping Shanti Bahini? I didn't expect.
Indians loves their country more than we love our country. They will protect their people.
President Obama didn't try CIA agents, that's also the right thing to do.
 
Tipaimukh Dam will go through because our government is weak.
That's the bottom line.
 
 

--- On Mon, 5/25/09, amir ali <gulshanali@hotmail.com> wrote:

From: amir ali <gulshanali@hotmail.com>
Subject: RE: [ALOCHONA] Tipaimukh Dam/Cachar Plain Irrigation Project: A Complicated International Disaster Scenario for Bangladesh
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
Date: Monday, May 25, 2009, 9:00 AM



Because, she is the lobyist working for that country.
Mohammed.
 

To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
From: nistabdhota@yahoo.com.au
Date: Sun, 24 May 2009 08:43:06 -0700
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Tipaimukh Dam/Cachar Plain Irrigation Project: A Complicated International Disaster Scenario for Bangladesh



When Farida Majid constantly assaults on Islam and Islam loving people of Bangladesh in defense of her secular Bangladesh, it's easily understood that she is an ultra-secularist and as such she exercises her political right and freedom of expression. However, it's really difficult to understand why she has to apply a dying attack on any patriotic attempt, issue, opinion and movement that is simply aimed at safeguarding the safety, security, independence, sovereignty, existence and overall interests of Bangladesh? Her attack becomes even dreadfully fierce and morbid when India is alleged of infringing Bangladesh's rights and interests. Why she must react and castigate any allegation against a country that is not hers.



From: Enayet Ullah <enayet_2000@ yahoo.com>
To: alochona@yahoogroup s.com
Cc: emancipation 4 <4_emancipation@ yahoogroups. com>
Sent: Friday, 22 May, 2009 11:30:31 PM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Tipaimukh Dam/Cachar Plain Irrigation Project: A Complicated International Disaster Scenario for Bangladesh

Farida Majid is another cult BAL-lover, boot-licker of India. Awami League is the only political party in Bangladesh which stitch only one issue - Seikh Mujib. Farida Majib is another concubine of BAL with perverted patriotism, more leaning towards serving India than Bangladesh.
 
Looks like Hasina is in a hurry to give India all the privileges she could, before she misses her joy-ride. Remember Awami League to came power in 1996 since inception of Bangladesh. People of Bagladesh despise Hasina and her politics for last 25 years! This is the biggest victory for Awami League for last 37 years. It will be a grave mistake if Hasina & Farida plays only politics of revenge! It will be a grave mistake if we all keep quiet to the hegemony of India! Silence is not the answer!
 
We need to defend our country's interest first. We can not be silent - if we need to chant slogan in the street of Bagladesh for 48 times for every dam India building against Bangladesh, we should scream loudest! Farida Majid, you can rest in peace next to Taslima Nasrin in Kolkatta, we care less!
 
Our foreign policy should be carefully crafted, Hasina is toying with India, turning Bangladesh as a poodle of India.
 


--- On Thu, 5/21/09, Farida Majid <farida_majid@ hotmail.com> wrote:

From: Farida Majid <farida_majid@ hotmail.com>
Subject: RE: [ALOCHONA] Tipaimukh Dam/Cachar Plain Irrigation Project: A Complicated International Disaster Scenario for Bangladesh
To: "Alochona Alochona" <alochona@yahoogroup s.com>
Date: Thursday, May 21, 2009, 3:04 PM

   Here is a message I received from the Land of the Dreaded Dadas.  Not one or two.
India is planning 48 major dams! How many grand rallies will Jamaat stage?
 
     Progresive Indians are just as worried.
 
     The Dreaded Dadas are likely to travel by train to Toronto and convert all the B'deshi Muslims in Canada by the process of 'suddhi'.
 
============ ==
 
This is a joint struggle and all of us have to get involved. Unfortunately the rest of India is really not aware of it and of the 48 major dams that are scheduled to be built in this decade. Bye
 
Walter
 
Dr Walter Fernandes
Director
North Eastern Social Research Centre
110 Kharghuli Road (1st floor)
Guwahati 781004
Assam, India

 

To: dhakamails@yahoogro ups.com
From: bd_mailer@yahoo. com
Date: Tue, 19 May 2009 17:41:58 -0700
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Tipaimukh Dam/Cachar Plain Irrigation Project: A Complicated International Disaster Scenario for Bangladesh



Tipaimukh Dam/Cachar Plain Irrigation Project: A Complicated International Disaster Scenario for Bangladesh
 
By: Dr. Debabrata Roy Laifungbam / Dr. Soibam Ibotombi

The scenario and consequences of a Tipaimukh Dam-break has not been thoroughly studied. NEEPCO has yet to complete a basic scientifically sound environment impact assessment even though it is geared up to start construction after having opened international bidding for Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC). Such a study has to be conducted by international as well as national dam-safety experts as the impacts of a dam-break will have both severe upstream and downstream effects.

However, the downstream effects of a Tipaimukh Dam-break have been studied by the Government of Bangladesh since 1992-94. In its Flood Action Plan 6 (FAP 6) as part of the North Eastern Regional Water Management Plan of Bangladesh, the scenario of a dam failure at Tipaimukh Dam project was investigated by international hydraulic and environmental experts in the context of a comprehensive flood action plan for Sylhet District.

India is also planning a major Cachar Plain Irrigation Project downstream of the dam. Bangladesh already knew a fact that we in Manipur do not know still. Surprisingly, for the people of Manipur, the Tipaimukh project is not the only project at the drawing board on the Barak River. This means that water released from the dam reservoir will be further diverted for the irrigation project planned in Cachar District, contrary to NEEPCO's recent claims.

FAP 6 had a Future Without Plan (FWO) component that looks at a dam-break scenario with minimally adequate project description available through the Joint Rivers Commission (Indo-Bangladesh) . Bangladesh has pending issues with the Government of India with regard to the dam that includes the effects of flow regulation. Regulation of the Barak's flow by Tipaimukh Dam would provide India with the opportunity to irrigate the Cachar Plain; this India proposes to do.

Since the Cachar Plain Irrigation plan involves the loss of water, it is a matter of great concern to Bangladesh particularly its North Eastern Region as no statement is available how much water Indian intends to take from this scheme. For the purposes of the FAP 6 study it was assumed that the total depth of irrigation water to be applied is 1 M and that the water is diverted on a continuous basis during the six dry months (November through April).

A dam-break scenario must be studied by dam safety specialists. It is very doubtful whether NEEPCO or any other agency has conducted such a study. According to the Bangladesh study, the risk that the Tipaimukh Dam poses for Bangladesh is extremely significant for the Meghna River system (including the Surma and Kushiyara Rivers of Sylhet).

The study recognises that the region is known to be vulnerable to earthquakes. These events, though relatively rare are extreme in intensity, and can reverse existing morphologic trends and even induce re-configuration of the drainage system.

The likelihood that during 1991-2015 the region would experience an earthquake of magnitude 7.6 (similar to the 8 July 1918 event with its epicenter at Srimangal of magnitude 7.6, return period of 30 to 50 years) is between 40 and 60%; of magnitude 8.7 (similar to the 12 June 1897 event with its epicenter at the Shillong Plateau with magnitude 8.7, the largest on record, return period of 300 to 1000 years) is perhaps 2 to 5%, assuming the events are random and can be described with a simple binomial probability model.

On past evidence, river channels and sedimentation patterns in the Northeast Region may be subject to major disruptions following a severe seismic event. During past earthquakes, instances of ground liquefaction, landsliding, rapid subsidence, collapse of river banks, and changes to river courses have been documented (District Gazetteer, 1917). The effects of earthquakes along the Brahmaputra River were described in 1899:

"Strong ground shaking triggers liquefaction of river cross-sections in a few seconds; underwater slopes slide towards the stream axis, the bottom of the river heaves, and the banks become lowered; water immediately starts to rise and overflows the banks and adjacent zones where infilling of the channels takes place. Natural sills form, causing temporary lakes to develop; channels gradually re-open by scouring where currents are strong enough, and consequently water levels decrease.

Where channels remain blocked, streams desert their old channels to form new ones; and in subsequent years, the huge amounts of sediment poured into the river as a result of the earthquake gradually moves downstream. Sediment transport is higher than previously and siltation conditions are therefore modified.

Earthquakes are believed to have also induced landsliding and slope failures in headwater catchments in the Shillong Plateau, which could greatly increase the amount of sediment supplied to the region for long periods of time. Joglekar (1971) described apparent impacts of major earthquakes on the upper Brahmaputra in Assam, India. After the severe earthquakes of 1947 and 1950, the bed level near Dibrugarh rose substantially. Between 1947 and 1951, low water levels rose by as much as three to four metres; thereafter they were steady.

Dam Failure

This risk is however a significant issue relating to future environmental management of the Northeast Region water system of Bangladesh.

A dambreak is a catastrophic failure of a dam which results in the sudden draining of the reservoir and a severe flood wave that causes destruction and in many cases death downstream. While such failures are rare and are not planned they have happened to dams, large and small, from time to time. The International Commission on Large Dams (ICOLD) has identified 164 major dam failures in the period from 1900 to 1965.

With respect to the safety of the proposed Tipaimukh Dam, hydraulic and environmental specialists opine that well-designed and constructed rockfill dams are perhaps the safest type for large heights (Tipaimukh would be among the largest of such dams in the world), but local circumstances may be much more important in this respect than dam type.

Two examples illustrate the types of failures that have been reported. The most famous, the Teton Dam in the United States was a 90 m high earth-fill dam which failed in 1.25 hours. The flood wave which was released had a peak discharge of 65,000 m3 s-1 at the dam and a height of 20 m high in the downstream canyon. The Huaccoto Dam in Peru was 170 m high, similar to the Tipaimukh Dam; it failed over 48 hours due to a natural landslide in the reservoir.

Generally, a flood wave travels downstream at a rate in the order of 10 km hr-1 although velocities as high as 30 km hr-1 have been reported near failure sites. From these wave velocities, it would appear that the initial flood wave could travel the 200 km distance from Tipaimukh Dam site to the eastern limit of Bangladesh within 24 hours having a height of perhaps 5 m. Peak flooding would occur some 24 to 48 hours later. High inflows would persist for ten days or longer and the flooded area would likely take several weeks to drain.

The Tipaimukh reservoir is huge (15,000 Mm3) compared with experience reported in the literature. In the event of a significant unplanned discharge, the river system in Bangladesh would respond (drain) rather slowly, as characterized by the outflow rate relative to the floodplain storage volume), such that most of the water released would remain ponded over the Northeast Region for some time. Assuming a release volume of 10 Mm3 and a ponded area of 100 km2, the depth of flooding would be an average of 1.0 m above the normal flood level.

There will be first an imperative need for Bangladesh and India to cooperate in formulating and implementing risk management measures if the Tipaimukh Dam as presently designed should be constructed. A wide range of risk management measures are normally undertaken, including: regular inspections by independent engineering teams, instrumentation and plans for warning downstream populations of deteriorating conditions of a dam, evacuation plans, and so on. As and when India's plans proceed, there will be a clear need for Bangladesh to avail itself of expert technical assistance from dam safety specialists experienced with very large dam/reservoir systems and trans-border risk management.

For illustrative purposes only, the Bangladesh study modeled flood waves for a test case of an instantaneous failure, 50 m wide extending to 100 m below the crest of the dam. Discharge and water level hydrographs were presented for three locations: at the exit from the mountain valley (km 80), at Silchar (in the middle of the Cachar plain, km 140) and at Amalshid (km 200).

It was forecast that substantial attenuation of the flood wave would occur upstream of Amalshid and that the flood wave at Amalshid would be a long-duration event. Depending on the breech geometry and peak discharge, the flood peak would occur at Amalshid approximately 2 to 3 days after the dam break had occurred and flooding would continue for ten days or more. The flood levels at Amalshid would rise to approximately 25 m PWD (peak water discharge), which is at approximately 8 m above the floodplain level. This flood level depends on the boundary assumptions made and could vary depending on floodplain conveyance.

Socio-Economic Aspects: "An Electric Bulb from every Tree"

As per the technical report of the NEEPCO (1998), the dam will have a firm generation of 401.25MW only implying that 401.25MW of power only will be generated regularly, and this is the best scenario. And again as per the past Central Government formula, the Government of Manipur (GOM) will get only 12% of 401.25 i.e. 40-43MW free (sharing with Mizoram where 90% is claimed by Manipur state but this is subject to Government of India set norms which has changed from time to time; it has been revised since).

In order to get this 40-43MW of power, the State will be loosing around 293.56Km2 under submergence of reservoir water which includes 4760ha of gardens, 2053ha of rice cultivable land, 178.21Km2 of total 7251.36Km2 of forest land beside affecting a numbers of villages (15+90). Let us introspect as well as retrospect the case of Tipaimukh dam in comparison with the Loktak Hydro Electric Project and analyze the possible implications in the next 50 years hence especially for the natural resources that will be deprived of the state.

When Loktak project was initiated in the late 1960's - the tall claims made by the authority/governmen t were: thousands of hectares of cultivable land will be generated by draining water of Loktak lake to Leimatak river, price of 1 unit of power will be only 5 paise, the installed capacity of 105MW is 10 times more than the power what the State requires and there will be no power problem for the next 50 years or so, etc.

Now it is over 20 years of commissioning of the project - thousands of cultivable land have been submerged under the lake (reservoir) water contrary to what they claimed, 50-70 paise was price of 1 unit of power at the time of commission, power supply is at its worst nowadays and likely to worsen, which every citizen knows; and rehabilitation and compensation issues are yet to be settled at the Gauhati High Court.

And besides, a range of grave environmental and ecological problems especially of the Loktak Lake threatens this internationally important wetland's very existence along with the Keibul Lamjao National Park, with ecological damage to the entire Imphal Valley and the catchment areas. The State gets about 6-10MW of free power intermittently from the Loktak Hydro Project. The question is whether it is sufficient to compensate the economic, natural resources and environmental loss which the State bears presently?

Now let us examine the possible implications of the Tipaimukh project in a similar manner. As pointed out above, the 293.56Km2 of submerged area consists of 5760ha and 2053ha of garden and cultivable lands respectively. These figures, the author believes, are far underestimated because at present, less than 50% of arable and cultivable lands in the Barak river beds are utilized due to thin population of the region, which will be possibly utilized in the next 50 years due to population increase. So approximately a total of about 15,626ha (11520ha + 4106ha) of cultivable land will be lost.

Again, although 178.21Km2 of the total forest area will be permanently submerged under water, practically the natural resources of a much larger forest area will be unavailable permanently to the State. Net Present Value levy for forest land conversion to non-forestry use as per the Supreme Court directives would also make the project economically unviable, as claimed by NEEPCO on 28t January 2006 (Tipaimukh Multipurpose project tariff increases by 67 paisa/unit on this account of NPV) in its submission to the Supreme Court's Expert Committee.

Compensatory Afforestation Programmes (CAP) will take over large tracts of other categories of forested lands besides Reserve Forests as well, but most of these programmes will never be implemented. After completion of the project, the project authority will claim that depletion of forest and other natural resources in the nearby catchment area will increase siltation in the reservoir leading to the reduction in storage capacity of the reservoir. This, in turn, will reduce the generation capability of the power plant and so on.

The same was true in the case Loktak project where the lake water level is to be maintained as a reservoir in order to generate electricity, submerging thousands of cultivable land contrary to what the authority claimed in the beginning. So the question that can be raised is whether it will be a wise policy, in the long run, to surrender such a huge natural resources just for 40-43MW of free power. This is a huge question, no doubt, to ponder upon.

Discussion and Conclusion

Structural and tectonic setting, plate kinematics and interaction as well as seismic potential of Manipur state and the serious implications for the entire region's existing geomorphologic trends and even induce re-configuration of the drainage system amount to scientific and technical objections to the construction of a huge dam of the magnitude proposed in case of the Tipaimukh dam. Because, such a outmoded design dam may have the potential risk of a great disaster, killing hundreds and thousands of lives, and causing generational incalculable losses to future economic options, livelihoods and cultures.

So, the government must rethink about the construction of such a huge dam. Instead, it is advisable to construct relatively smaller projects with improved modern designs in order to scale down the magnitude of possible disaster since earthquake prediction and prevention is beyond human capability. It would be wiser and economically more sustainable to consider smaller dams or Run-of-the-River (RoR) schemes with an objective to reduce human induced disaster, and save the river.

Construction of smaller projects not only will tone down the magnitude of the possible human induced disaster but also will provide balanced sustainable development avenues for various regions of the State as well as minimize the environmental and ecological instability. In the meantime, Government of Manipur also should reassess all the power projects especially in terms of its operational efficiency and potentiality instead of simply waiting for a mere 40-43MW free power from Tipaimukh project which could last as long as 20-25 years.

For instance, the expected maximum head (difference between reservoir water level and power generation unit) is about 160m in the case of Tipaimukh project while in the case of Loktak Lake the head is about 269m which is approximately 100m more than that of the proposed Tipaimukh project. But such a tremendous head is wasted just to generate a variable 40-80MW of power only. This is nothing but sheer wasting of huge natural resources by severely underutilizing the immense potential. So, the potential of the installed Loktak project should be fully harnessed by Manipur after reassessing and renovating with an objective of enhancing its efficacy and benefit to the State while the project exists.

In conclusion, let us not waste and surrender our huge natural resources just for 40-43MW of power, and let us introspect, learn through mistakes of the past and rectify ourselves than repeating it. Because a wrong decision of ours will cost heavily on our future generation who will, otherwise, never forgive us. Let us remember popular Native American proverb which says, "The frog does not drink up the pond in which he lives."

Dr. Debabrata Roy Laifungbam is the Director, CORE, Manipur. Dr. Soibam Ibotombi is from the Dept. of Earth Sciences, Manipur University. This is their first contribution to e-pao.net . You can contact CORE (Centre for Organisation Research & Education) at http://www.coremani pur.org/

  Opinion Section - "Building of Tipaimukh Dam"
     A special repprt by Jalal Moin from Bangladesh
     David Buhril asks is this really a "development projects"?
     David Buhril asks is this really a "development projects"?
     David Buhril asks is this really a "development projects"?
     RS Jassal wonders will it be Loss or Revival of Culture?
     Thangkhanlal Ngaihte says it is not going to be completed soon
     T. Vunglallian paints a gloomy picture if..
     Prof. T Awnzagen analyse the good and bad of Tipaimukh Dam.
     Geoffery argues that NE will become an investor?s paradise.
     U A Shimray urges to follow Kayapo's example.
     T. Vunglallian suggests a smaller dam!
     T. Vunglallian suggests a smaller dam!
     Elf Hmar questions armed groups involvement.
     Namdingpou Kamei on the losses and destructions to people.
     N Shyamsundar Singh gives a technical Q&A on Tipaimukh Dam
     N Shyamsundar Singh gives a technical Q&A on Tipaimukh Dam
     Elf Hmar elicits more analytic ground realities assessment
     Anna Pinto argues pm the climate impact of building Tipaimukh dam.
     Shonadhar Meinam says building Tipaimukh dam makes sense.
     Dr. Soibam Ibotombi & Dr. Debabrata Roy Laifungbam analyze the implication of building a Tipaimukh Dam
     Dr. Soibam Ibotombi analyze the implication of building a Tipaimukh Dam
     Dr RK Ranjan gives a scientific perspective on Tipaimukh Dam
     Thuanrei Phaomei paints a gloomy picture..
     Dr Laishangbam Sanjit argues the pros side of Dam building
     Thangkhanlal Ngaihte points out the other side in dam debate.
     By: Khwairakpam Gajananda
 
 





Windows Live™: Keep your life in sync. Check it out.




Need a Holiday? Win a $10,000 Holiday of your choice. Enter now..


Hotmail® has a new way to see what's up with your friends. Check it out.



__._,_.___


[Disclaimer: ALOCHONA Management is not liable for information contained in this message. The author takes full responsibility.]
To unsubscribe/subscribe, send request to alochona-owner@egroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___