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Report and Reality: Melamchi environment plan only on paper

KATHMANDU, March 8: Kathmandu Upatyaka Khanepani Limited (KUKL)  had prepared an Environmental Management Plan (EMP) in 2014 with a view to identifying and mitigating environmental pollution resulting...
By Republica

Lack of proper implementation a threat to public health

KATHMANDU, March 8: Kathmandu Upatyaka Khanepani Limited (KUKL)  had prepared an Environmental Management Plan (EMP) in 2014 with a view to identifying and mitigating environmental pollution resulting from its Melamchi Water Supply Project (MWSP) during various stages of the project implementation. Though the report had laid out stringent environment protection plans, lack of proper implementation has become a serious threat to the health of the general public.


The report  identified the problem of dust thrown up by road excavations and other construction activities and  recommended mitigation measures such as the sprinkling of water. Although  the      Project Implementation Directorate  (PID) has claimed that they are sprinkling water  regularly on the busier road stretches, the locals of some of the affected areas  said  such activities are not at all regular.


Pedestrians, motorists and people from various  walks of life are suffering from the dust pollution caused by MWSP's pipe-laying activities along the major road stretches and  inner roads of Kathmandu Valley. Suraj Raj Pandey, who regularly walks  the Chabahil road stretch, is among  thousands  suffering from the resulting health hazards.


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"I have developed respiratory problems just from walking the Chabahil –  Gopi Krishna  stretch on a daily basis. It's nearly suffocating due to the thick amount of dust particles," said Pandey, a local of Dhumbarahi. "I don't see water sprinkling  being carried out on a regular basis. And they don't do it during the afternoon when the dust affects the maximum number of pedestrians and motorists."


  KUKL's PID  started the pipe-laying work on  teeming Chabahil road  some  weeks ago. However, the work is being delayed and there are no signs of progress now. This has not only caused dust pollution but also resulted in frequent traffic snarls as  movement on the road is limited to a narrow section spared by PID's work.


Although PID has acknowledged the environmental pollution, they downplayed the  health hazards.



In a recent press conference, PID/KUKL Project Director Tiresh Prasad Khatri said their activities have contributed only a little to the dust pollution in the Valley. "And besides, our activities only generate PM 10 pollutants, which are not very harmful to human health," he added.


However, health experts  disagree. "Though PID's road digging activities generate only PM 10 pollutants, the accompanying traffic snarls slow down vehicular movement, which in turn results in high concentrations of PM 2.5 pollutants that are a real hazard   to humans," said Dr Khem Bahadur Karki, member secretary of Nepal Health Research Council.


"Melamchi Project work is  undoubtedly the major contributor to dust pollution in the Valley. It has become unbearable. Such irresponsibility  has led to long-term impact on human health," added Dr Karki.



A total of $795,860 (or Rs 8.5 million) has been allocated for dealing with the  environmental cost of the Melamchi Project, states the EMP report. The budget includes the cost of a five-year public awareness campaign, monitoring of the EMP, and conducting an Archaeological Impact Assessment if required.


Activists Jagannath Lamichhane, Dibyesh Giri and Priyasha Maharjan had filed a Right to Information (RTI) petition demanding complete information on the environmental and public health hazards caused by the pipe-laying work. They wanted to learn whether the contractors were complying with their contracts. Though some reports were made available, PID has not provided reports on the monitoring of EMP.


"Though PID has presented a strong proposal to mitigate the environmental pollution caused by its work, the public has been cheated in the implementation aspect," said Lamichhane, one of the activists. 

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