Categorisation
Once adequate information is available, JICA classifies projects into four categories according to the significance and extent of environmental and social impacts taking into account an outline of the project, scale, site condition, etc. The guidelines also assert that JICA can change the category after screening and in cases where the category has not been clearly specified at the Master Plan stage, the categorization will be based on the likely significant impacts on all the considerations – environmental, social, derivative, and cumulative.
The Bullet Train Project is classified as ‘Category A’ project...
more... as it is likely to have significant adverse social, economic, and environmental impacts since it passes through severely and critically polluted, ecologically sensitive, and socio-economically vulnerable areas. For Category A, projects like the Bullet Train, the project proponents must submit, in addition to the preparatory survey, Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) and Social Impact Assessment (SIA) reports. The Environment Impact Assessment and Social Impact Assessment Report (SIA) submitted are for the year 2010. In the same area, various projects like Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC), Western Dedicated Freight Corridor (WDFC), and Express Highways are coming up. The cumulative impacts of all the projects together must be considered while determining the category of the Bullet Train Project.
The Bullet Train Project’s public consultations have been undertaken in the year 2018. As per international and even national norms and in the interest Interest An amount paid in remuneration of an investment or received by a lender. Interest is calculated on the amount of the capital invested or borrowed, the duration of the operation and the rate that has been set. of just and fair environment and social outcomes, consultations should be based upon the most recent studies and reports. If this is not done, the project will not be just illegal but also unscientific because such consultations were conducted based on eight-year-old reports of 2010. These reports have to be based on more recent and due assessment processes since the Bullet Train’s route is passing through severely and critically polluted clusters of Gujarat as well as some ecologically most critical and socio-economically vulnerable areas, both in the states of Gujarat and Maharashtra.
Environmental Impact Assessment and Social Impact Assessment
JICA clearly states that the impacts, assessed with regard to environmental and social considerations, include impacts on human health and safety, as well as on the natural environment, that are transmitted through air, water, soil, waste, accidents, water usage, climate change, ecosystems, fauna and flora, including trans-boundary or global scale impacts. These also include social impacts, including migration of population and involuntary resettlement, local economy such as employment and livelihood, utilization of land and local resources, social capital such as social and decision-making institutions and processes, existing social infrastructures and services, vulnerable social groups such as poor and indigenous peoples, equality of benefits and losses, equality in the development process, gender, children’s rights, cultural heritage, local conflicts of interest, infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS, and working conditions including occupational safety. The subsequent and cumulative impacts along with the project lifecycle impacts should also be considered.
The EIA and SIA reports of 2010 lack any of the impacts and considerations regarding health, safety and quality of life of not just the human beings as well as for the health of the natural ecosystems. It is also pertinent to note that since 2010, many other initiatives and projects like the WDFC, DMIC, Vadodara – Mumbai Expressway have been undertaken by the Government at National, State and Local level. The influences of these projects have not been taken into account in the 2010 EIA and SIA and, therefore, these should be redone.
In the EIA and SIA consultation processes, not only people’s participation is missing in a proper and real sense but the authorities have also not considered the crucial report of (i) Gujarat Ecology Commission – ‘State Environmental Action Programme Industrial Pollution, Phase III – Sectoral Report, Volume I dated April 2002, (ii) Order dated 07.05.2004 of the Supreme Court in Writ Petition (Civil) No. 695/1995 pursuant to the Supreme Court Monitoring Committee’s report, (iii) ‘Comprehensive Environmental Assessment of Industrial Clusters’ of Central Pollution Control Board, of 2009, 2011 and 2013, [5] (iv) various crucial important investigations report of Central Pollution Control Board and Gujarat Pollution Control Board, and (v) various High Court and Supreme Court’s order regarding current statues of environment degradation of the area. These reports and orders of the courts record and reflect the severely degrading state of the environment for the majority of the Bullet Train Project area.
JICA conducts environmental and social surveys at EIA level for Category A projects and prepares draft of mitigation measures, monitoring plan, and an institutional arrangement. At every stage when project proponents consult local stakeholders during and after the information disclosure, JICA monitors the process and incorporates the feedback of these consultations into its survey results. It also analyzes alternatives including ‘without project’ scenarios. Over the course of the project, JICA closely monitors items that have significant environmental impacts in order to keep a check on the proponent’s claims of including and addressing environmental and social considerations. The project proponents are required to supply necessary information for monitoring by appropriate means, including in writing. JICA conducts its own investigations when necessary. Once the draft reports are prepared, they are discussed with the project proponents and consultations with local stakeholders are carried out as well. Once it is concluded that the proponents have met the environmental and social consideration guidelines, JICA prepares and submits the final reports to the proponents. The results of the monitoring process are disclosed on the website, including in local languages, to the extent they can be made public.
Even though the entire EIA-SIA public consultation proceedings were video recorded, that too have not been shared in public domain. The minutes of EIA-SIA are required to be made public, especially to be made available to its stakeholders but they have been neither uploaded on JICA or any of Government of India’s website nor placed in any of the public domain yet.
Consultation with Local Stakeholders
The prime project proponent, the Government of India, needs to work with JICA to create agreeable frameworks for consultation with stakeholders. To assure fair participation, project proponents are required to publicize consultations in advance and pay special attention to the people who are severely and directly going to be affected by this project. For projects with adverse impacts like in the case of the Bullet Train, JICA insists on consultation with local stakeholders at an early stage to discuss their views on the project, their development needs, and environmental and social impacts of the proposal as well as analysis of alternatives. It also encourages that minutes of each meeting are prepared for perusal by the stakeholders. To ensure democratic decision-making, JICA insists local stakeholder participation and encourages project proponents to disclose information well in advance when they have meetings. JICA offers support in preparation of disclosure information in a form and language understandable by local stakeholders. Additionally, JICA also discloses information on its website in Japanese, English, and local languages.
Almost all stakeholder consultations, both environment and social, were announced on a very short notice for the public and the concerned stakeholders for them to participate at all, let alone effectively. The advance notice period has varied from 24 hours (1 day) to few weeks. There is no coherent approach towards the announcement of stakeholder consultations. At times, they were announced for district level and conducted for taluka levels. There was no clarification as to whether the stakeholders invited to the consultation should represent social concerns or environmental concerns or both. In fact, it became apparent that the confusion was caused intentionally. Two different public advertisements were published by NHRSCL for the same venue and same timing, but for different purposes. The epitome of the disorder was that even the concerned authorities conducting the consultations were not clear as to under which Indian law and provisions the consultations were conducted!
In case of Environmental Consultations, the Supplementary EIA copies are kept for public viewing at different places which are 100s of Kms away at offices of NHRSCL. The nearest place being the District Collector office. In many cases, this is about 30 Kms away. The supplementary EIA copies are being conspicuously made available only to certain chosen individuals. At the same time, in some districts, there is no mention of the EIA or a copy made available to the public. The reports are available in English language, while most of the stakeholder participants can neither read nor understand English. The reports and documents should have been made available in the local languages, Gujarati and Marathi, for the public to be able to represent and participate effectively. Farmers (who are mostly illiterate or semi-literate) were not allowed to raise questions/queries. Environmental activists/experts were deliberately shunned out of the consultation venue with use of police force. This is open violation of basic human rights of the people and also as per Section 2.5 of the JICA guidelines – Concern about Social Environment and Human Rights. For the organisers the stakeholders were mere spectators attending the consultation. Even farmers organisations and other social/environment groups are kept out of the process. Elected representatives who can potentially raise uncomfortable queries regarding the project were manhandled and taken away by force before the start of consultations. The Surat consultation is one such example. The queries raised during the consultations were very casually addressed and there is no written response to the written submissions or oral queries raised at the consultations. The minutes of the consultations and the video documentation are also not made public. These are essential for a transparent and accountable process.
As if all this was not enough, some of the public announcement for the stakeholder consultations for the districts of Navsari and Valsad (both in the state of Gujarat), published invitation in local newspapers specifically mentioning that ‘unauthorised people would not be allowed at the consultation’. We fail to understand what criteria are prescribed under JICA guidelines or even Government of India’s policies to segregate attending stakeholders as “authorised” and “unauthorised”. Even Supreme Court of India had clearly stated that all citizens, including those not directly affected by a project, should be allowed to participate in environmental public hearings. Therefore, not allowing some citizens to speak at public hearings would be also a violation of the Supreme Court order.
From the manner in which the stakeholder consultations were conducted, it appears that these are just paper arrangements; that is, bureaucratic paper work or attempts to divert and delay the consultations, with no serious concern for the people and the environment. It seems that, in the case of these consultations for the proposed MAHSR project, participation, transparency, respect for basic human rights of people, and such are just words to throw around and mislead. Trampling of basic human rights through police force seems to be a part and parcel of the conducting of stakeholder consultations. It is to be noted that at several places, due to the apprehensions of affected people arising out of the high-handed and opaque functioning for the consultation, the atmosphere was vitiated and the consultations had to be postponed or rescheduled.
There are claims by the concerned authorities that the consultations of 2018 comprise the second round of consultations. They claim that the first consultation was conducted but details of first consultation are not available in the public domain and people at large are not aware about such consultations at all. The people only know of the consultations that were held from April 2018 onwards. Therefore, the MAHSR authorities should make clear the details, if any, of the first consultation, the dates when it was held, the participants, the outcomes, suggestions, and reports.
It is also quite surprising that during EIA-SIA hearing, we found no Indian official taking any notes. This is almost unprecedented in any of EIA-SIA public consultations being held for any development project.