International
law and EIA: context of River Linking project
Mohammad
Monirul Azam and Md. Saiful Karim
India
is interested to implement a mega scheme like the proposed river-linking
project that may turn the Bangladesh delta into a desert. It is apprehended
that the proposed river-linking project will encounter significant socio-economic,
ecological, environmental, biological and gradual deterioration of morphological
characteristics of the rivers-systems in Bangladesh.
It
is really unfortunate that this time Indian govt. is ignoring the adverse
effects it may have upon its neighbouring countries and also the principles
and obligation as laid down under international law for conducting an
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) and social impacts of this project.
This article will focus on the necessity of an EIA regarding this project
from the perspective of international law and environmental concerns.
Environmental
Impact Assessment (EIA)
An environmental impact assessment is a systematic and detailed study
of the adverse effects that a planned activity may have on the environment.
The EIA is meant to ensure consideration of a project's environmental
impacts and to influence policymaking by predicting the implications
of a project and aiding in the mitigation and alleviation of any harm.
Principle of environmental impact assessment is gathering strength and
international acceptance, and has reached the level of general recognition.
United
Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) promulgated goals and principles
of environmental impact assessment in 1987. The UNEP document defines
environmental impact assessment as "an assessment of the likely
or potential environmental impacts of a proposed activity" and
encourages the use of comprehensive environmental impact assessment.
International
Obligation to Conduct an EIA
The origin of environmental impact assessment can be found in the 1972
Stockholm Declaration, which resulted from the first international meeting
on the environment. Twenty years later, at the second international
conference on the environment, the Rio Declaration on Environment and
Development recognised the obligation to undertake environmental impact
assessment. The Rio Declaration under Principle 17 states that "environmental
impact assessment, as a national instrument, shall be undertaken for
proposed activities that are likely to have a significant adverse effect
on the environment…"
In
addition to the Rio Declaration, many other international environmental
agreements and treaties promulgated both before and after the Rio Declaration
mention, discuss, and require environmental impact assessment on an
international level.
Article
206 of the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea also
requires environmental impact assessment of any activity likely to cause
pollution of or significant and harmful changes to the sea.
Article
2 of the United Nations Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment
in a Trans-boundary Context (Espoo Convention) states that an environmental
impact assessment shall be undertaken prior to a decision to authorise
or undertake a proposed activity that is likely to cause a significant
adverse trans-boundary impact.
The
United Nations Convention on the Protection and Use of Trans-boundary
Watercourses and International Lakes stress on notifying other States
of projects with potential environmental effects and provides for the
participation of the public that may be affected and establishes a system
of post-project monitoring and analysis.
It
is worth noting that the Convention on the Law of the Non-navigational
Uses of International Watercourses, 1997 refers directly to environmental
impact assessment. This list is only a small sampling of the many documents,
which mention environmental impact assessment on an international scale.
Practices
of International Organisation
In addition to the above list of treaties and documents that include
EIA, many international organisations also support EIA procedures. The
World Bank Operational Directive on Environmental Assessment (OD 4.01),
which is introduced in October 1991, mandated an environmental assessment
for all projects that may have significant impacts on the environment.
The Asian Development Bank also established procedures for EIA in the
early 1980s. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) also encourages the use of EIA by states that aid developing
countries.
Other
organisations like the Inter-American Development Bank, the Organisation
of American States, the United Nations Development Programme, the European
Commission, the African Development Bank, and the European Investment
Bank etc promotes EIA as a prerequisite for funding. Therefore, methodology
of EIA is used widely throughout the world for initiating, proposing
or funding projects that may have adverse environmental effects.
EIA
in River Linking Project
The main argument against the river linking project is that a proper
environmental impact assessment of the project is yet to be conducted.
An environmental impact assessment is vital to this project as a consideration
of potential impacts on all environmental resources, including water
and biodiversity, in an integrated manner and adverse effects it may
have upon the co-basin states like Bangladesh.
India's
claim that the project is still a concept or idea is a trick or a mere
pretence for avoiding it's obligations to ensure an EIA, access to information,
negotiation in good faith etc. and in the mean time to proceed with
the project under veil.
We
therefore, urge the Government of Bangladesh, concerned officials, transitional
civil society members and all the peace loving and environmentalists
of the South Asian region to put pressure upon the Indian Government
to consider the following before proceeding any further on the project-
*Make
available all information on this project for a transparent and independent
professional assessment.
*Any withdrawal of water at upper catchments may cause depletion of
water resources lower down the river. This may cause severe inter-district,
inter-state, inter-country disputes as witness in the cases of Cauvery
among different states of India and between Indo-Bangladesh in the case
of Ganges.
*A systematic full cost - benefit analysis for the project on ecological
changes caused in the total basin may turn out to be economically fatal
for the present & future generations.
*The criss-cross of canals for inter-basin transfer of water will completely
jeopardise the hydrological balance of the region creating immense problems
of water logging and salinisation of land.
*Such a mega project will cause loss and livelihood of lakhs of people
both in Bangladesh and India including many indigenous peoples in India.
So how this project will compensate the stakeholders both in Bangladesh
and India should be considered seriously.
*The mountains, glaciers, rivers, deserts, oceans, forests & climate
are all connected like a web in a macro-dynamics of nature. We cannot
tamper with such macro forces without a proper understanding.
*The proposal of Govt. of India must go through a series of public hearing
throughout India including the affected regions of Bangladesh (because
Bangladesh Govt. alone can't permit India without consulting it's affected
peoples) leading to the establishment of an 'Independent Commission'
consisting of environmental scientist, geologists, geographers, hydrologists,
lawyers, sociologist & economist to go through the public opinion
to assess the best alternative option to fulfil its justifiable prioritised
needs within the parameters of sustainable and equitous development.
*The project, if implemented, would ultimately lead to total decay of
the existing river systems, especially deltaic distributaries and invite
an ecological disaster.
Concluding
Remarks
Although all states have the right to initiate development projects
and enjoy their benefits, there is likewise a duty to ensure that those
projects do not significantly damage the environment of other countries.
As mentioned earlier, yet there is no environmental impact assessment
of the proposed project. But after proper environmental assessment the
project may not be considered so viable as predicted now and it will
cause significant harms in Bangladesh.
Principle of trusteeship of the earth's resources, the principle of
intergenerational justice, the principle of development and environmental
conservation must go hand in hand with any kinds of development work
like the river-linking project. That is why, without EIA India's initiatives
on river linking project is a violation of international environmental
law and human rights law and any future version of the River Linking
Project must be preceded by a complete EIA including it's social and
environmental consequences in other co-basin states.
Mohammad
Monirul Azam: Lecturer, Department of Law, Premier University, Chittagong.
Md. Saiful Karim: Officer, Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers Association
(BELA).