What's new

Gadani Coal Fired Power Park The "Environmental Death Warrant For Karachi."

PakEye

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Dec 8, 2010
Messages
1,229
Reaction score
0
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
By Fahim Zaman
Power park: an ill-conceived project
28_09_2013_014_007_001.jpg

THE severity of Karachi`s environmental problems, chief amongst them air pollution, are well known. If the government goes ahead with the proposal of establishing the Pakistan Power Park Company (PPPC) in Gadani, Balochistan, the health hazards faced by millions are certain to intensify.

On Aug 19, a week before announcing his plans for the PPPC, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif criticised the earlier government for starting construction on the NeelumJhelum power project without having laid down power lines to connect it to the national electricity grid. But his own government`s plan betrays similar irrationality.

The PPPC would generate 6,600 megawatts of electricity through 10 coal-powered plants using imported coal.

Gadani is a bustling commercial town barely 20km west of Karachi. Already located there is the Hubco Power Plant, generating 1,200MW of electricity and sending up massive plumes of smoke and emissions. Nearly all through the year, the wind blows directly from Gadani towards Karachi.

While the proposal has been made public, neitherthe government nor Wapda have initiated the environment impact assessment (which would also be required before approaching multilateral donors for financing a project tagged at an initial cost of $14 billion).

On the ground, however, eviction notices under the colonial-era Land Acquisition Act, 1894, have gone out to the villages of Mauza Janobi Mawoli and Mauza Kund to make room for the PPPC.

According to Dr Moazzam Ali, director of the Institute of Environmental Studies at Karachi University, `coalfired power plants generate massive quantities of greenhouse gases, toxic airborne particulate matter and tons of residual ash. Globally, these plants are considered amongst the worst environmental polluters.

`A typical 660MW coal-fired plant draws up to three billion gallons of water annually for its cooling systems, adversely affecting marine ecology. Global dependence on coal-fired power plants is, therefore, steadily going down, except in China.

Dr Shahid Naseem, PhD, a geogenic disease expert, observes that the emissionsby the PPPC could easily set new records for greenhouse gasses and airborne particulate matter, adding acidic and toxic pollutants such as sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, arsenic, boron, lead, selenium, mercury, chromium, etc, into the environment.

Just 1pc emission of sulphur by the PPPC would mean the annual addition of over 312,206 tons of sulphur in Gadani, Hub and Karachi`s micro-climates. Once these pollutants start to dissolve in the waters of Hub Dam, Haleji and elsewhere, the fallout in terms of health and habitat can be estimated.

Existing sulphur and other particulate emissions from Hubco, together with those from the Byco Oil Refinery, mean that the maximum permissible threshold has already been breached in the Gadani area.Several other questions need to be answered too.

One of these is financing.

Leading global sources of capital have announced a major shift away from financing coal-fired power plants.

Since South Africa in 2010, the World Bank has not committed to fund a single coalfired power plant, and eventhe South African venture was opposed by several countries on the grounds of environmental concerns.

Eminent physicist and environmentalist Dr A.H.

Nayyar grudgingly accepts that `coal continues to be an attractive fossil fuel because of the much more rapidly increasing prices of furnace oil, diesel, etc. But it should only be allowed under the strict condition of using clean-coal technologies.

Clean-coal technologies obviously increase the cost of energy production, which cannot be helpful in attracting investors.


Then, sustainable industrial growth demands powerful regulatory mechanisms a capacity that Pakistan has yet to demonstrate. Many experts fear that in absence of a tough and informed regulatory body, old and inefficient plants (commonly known as grandfather plants) that are being decommissioned all over the world could start popping up at the PPPC. The 2009 gift of a 320MW thermal power plant, built by General Electric and originally installed in 197374, would be a good example.

After 35 years of service in the UAE It became obsoleteand is currently collecting dust at Karachi port.

Another challenge to the establishment of the PPPC is posed by the imported coal that is to be used. Experts at the National Institute of Oceanography concede that detailed oceanography studles specific to the project are yet to be carried out. Yet they suggest that extremely long jetties and coal-conveying systems would be required to achieve considerable depths for incoming Panamax and Capesize class cargo ships a prerequisite for the daily import of 85,000 tons (31 million tons annually) of coal needed.

To accommodate such ships, the government would have to construct breakwaters to protect jetties, and coal-conveying systems.

The prime minister was briefed that Gadani could be suitable location because it was already connected to the national power grid at Jamshoro. But, crucially, the current transmission system has no surplus capacity; an additional system will be required.

The bottom line: Gadani is not the rational choice for the power park, and the proposal should be revisited.
Power park: an ill-conceived project | ePaper | DAWN.COM
 
It might be necessary to relocate this project 20 km or so farther away from Karachi. Also, provided other sources of energy are developed, we need not install so many coal-fired power plants.

Environmental impact report is yet to be presented. Since no steps have yet been taken to construct any thing on the ground, it is not necessarily gloom and doom.
 
I think the gov't wants a short term relief in load shedding. The big dams will take years. Until then, these plants are neessaries. Also coal is cheaper than petrol, or whatever they've been using.
 
I think the gov't wants a short term relief in load shedding. The big dams will take years. Until then, these plants are neessaries. Also coal is cheaper than petrol, or whatever they've been using.
Short Terms Relief !!!
On the price of Environmental Destruction of citizens of Karachi.
 
Who cares...it is Karachi - where the life is pretty cheap. It is not what i' am saying but it is visible from every sight or picture coming out of Karachi.
 
:pissed::pissed::pissed::pissed:This So Called Environmental Lobby Has Already Finished Kalabagh Dam Karachi Waterfront and Bundal Island Development.If Musharraf Had Listened To These Idiots Even Gwadar Port Might Not Have Been Made and Even Thar Coal Would Have Been Stopped.It Is Time Every Patriotic Pakistani Rises Up And Exposes These So Called Environmentalists
 
OMG. Whenever a project is start to kick off these god damn environment protection people jump in and start criticising. Somebody please tell them to stop their bull shit environment friendliness n think about country's economical progress. If we keep on stopping our projects like this, this will be destruction for our economy.
 
thar coal will not be used in the project either, coal will be imported instead, and a jetty is being built for this reason at gaddani
 
I would rather die with power present than during load-shedding!
 
OMG. Whenever a project is start to kick off these god damn environment protection people jump in and start criticising. Somebody please tell them to stop their bull shit environment friendliness n think about country's economical progress. If we keep on stopping our projects like this, this will be destruction for our economy.

I wouldn't be so quick to condemn them. Environmental protection and public health are an important part of progress and development. I'd rather take the environmentalists seriously and relocate the project rather than have to walk around wearing a gas mask with a mean life expectancy of 40.
 
I wouldn't be so quick to condemn them. Environmental protection and public health are an important part of progress and development. I'd rather take the environmentalists seriously and relocate the project rather than have to walk around wearing a gas mask with a mean life expectancy of 40.

PPP/MQM is crying because $10 billion project is located in Balochistan. They are not happy with Gwader either.
 
PPP/MQM is crying because $10 billion project is located in Balochistan. They are not happy with Gwader either.

I say we consider their reservations and pass a judgement on its merits, rather than dismiss them altogether for political reasons. I'm not sure the environmentalists would say any different had the power project been located in Sindh.
 
I would rather die with power present than during load-shedding!

You would quickly change your tune if you were coughing up blood.

On top of the filthy ash, sulphur and other fine particulate matter, you have the uranium radiation exposure in the environment to deal with (more than that of a nuclear plant).

At the very least, this plant needs to be far away from any high pop. density areas with the prevailing wind conditions taken into account.
 
No need for Coal project in cities should be built in Balouchistan mountains and other seculaded areas and power transmission lines be placed across to Sindh and other major cities
 

Back
Top Bottom