Coal ash pollution rampant in India despite COVID-19 lockdown

A new report released by Healthy Energy Initiative India and Legal Initiative for Forest and Environment (LIFE) has found that coal fly ash pollution was rampant in India in 2020-21 despite the COVID-19 lockdown

May 28, 2021
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Coal ash pollution

A new report released by Healthy Energy Initiative India and Legal Initiative for Forest and Environment (LIFE) has found that coal fly ash pollution was rampant in India in 2020-21 despite the COVID-19 lockdown.

The report found at least 17 major incidents that occurred in 7 states from April 2020 to March 2021. The report titled “Coal Ash in India – Vol II: An environmental, social and legal compendium of coal ash mismanagement in India, 2020-21” is a continuation of a similar report released in 2020 that documented 76 coal fly ash related accidents across the country between 2010-2020 and provided an overview of the management of coal fly ash in India, and the threat it poses to human health and environment.

Report analyzed the media reporting around coal fly ash accidents and found, “incidents were reported from 7 states including Madhya Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, West Bengal and Maharashtra. Ash pond collapse, air pollution from ash ponds and discharge of coal fly ash into rivers, streams and other water bodies were the most prevalent incidents, indicating the dismal state of coal fly ash management in the country. Most of these locations are regions where the coal fly ash disposal is a perennial problem and leaks, and accidents are routine.”

Pooja Kumar of Healthy Energy Initiative India said: "While big cities like Delhi celebrated clean air and blue skies during the COVID lockdown, we found regions like Korba in Chhattisgarh, Ennore and Seppakkam in North Chennai that reported multiple incidents and accidents related to fly ash mismanagement. We also found that residents from coal hotspots reporting that many power companies used the COVID-19 lockdown to dump waste indiscriminately in the water bodies, villages and around the highways, causing irreparable harm to the environment and public health."

Laxmi Chauhan, an activist from Korba, Chhattisgarh, said: “Korba has witnessed unprecedented coal fly ash pollution in the last one year, we have been living here for decades but have never seen a sight like this before. The power companies have used COVID-19 restrictions to dump coal fly ash wherever they could. Piles of fly ash can be found along the entire highway and ring roads and in villages everywhere. With summer winds, we are seeing the entire city covered in fly ash and we are breathing fly ash. Despite several complaints no action has been taken on the errant companies."

“Coal ash is the most ignored threat to the health of the community and the environment. India's regulatory mechanism has failed to deal with the problem which continues to increase every passing year; while Courts are yet to hold a company criminally liable for the toxic pollution caused by callous approach of power companies”, said Advocate Ritwick Dutta of Legal Initiative for Forest and Environment.

(SAM)

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