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India can divert only minimum water from Kishanganga: tribunal

Srinivas

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India can divert only minimum water from Kishanganga: tribunal

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ISLAMABAD: In a partial award announced in the Kishanganga dispute, the Hague-based Court of Arbitration allowed India on Monday to divert only a minimum flow of water from Neelum/Kishanganga River for power generation.

The Indian government had sought full diversion of the river water, but the court determined that India was under an obligation to construct and operate the Kishanganga Hydroelectric Plant (HEP) in such a way as to maintain a minimum flow of water in the river at a rate to be determined by the court in its final award.

A copy of the judgment available with Dawn shows that the final award will be announced in December this year. The court asked India and Pakistan to provide data by June so that it could determine the minimum flow of water.

On May 17, 2010, Pakistan had instituted arbitral proceedings against India under the Indus Waters Treaty 1960 and approached the International Court of Arbitration (ICA) against violation of the treaty. The ICA granted a stay and stopped India from constructing the 330MW Kishanganga hydroelectric project in occupied Kashmir.

Pakistan had put two questions, which were legal in nature, before the tribunal — whether India’s proposed diversion of the Neelum/Kishanganga River into another tributary breaches India’s legal obligations owed to Pakistan under the treaty and whether under the treaty, India may deplete or bring the reservoir level of a run-of-river plant below the dead storage level in any circumstances except in the case of an unforeseen emergency.

On the second question, the court determined that except in the case of an unforeseen emergency, the treaty did not permit reduction below the dead storage level of the water level in the reservoirs of run-of-river plants on the western rivers.

It further said the accumulation of sediment in the reservoir of a run-of-river plant on the western rivers did not constitute an unforeseen emergency that would permit depletion of the reservoir below the dead storage level for drawdown flushing purposes. Accordingly, India may not employ drawdown flushing at the reservoir of the Kishanganga hydroelectric plant to an extent that will entail depletion of the reservoir below dead storage level.

A senior official who is familiar with the development told Dawn that the court’s decision had endorsed Pakistan’s view that the neutral expert’s decision in the Baglihar case regarding drawdown flushing below the dead storage level was wrong and in gross violation of the parameters defined by the Indus Waters Treaty. Henceforth, designs and operations of run-of-river plants on western rivers would be determined by this decision and not that of the neutral expert.

By obtaining this award, Pakistan has taken the issue of Indus waters with India on a new basis. The years of inconclusive discussions and delays in the Indus Waters Commission during which Pakistan was constantly frustrated by the apparent inability of the commission to oversee the water regime effectively have been brought to an end.

Experts said the award had clearly and conclusively established that there were procedures set out in the Indus Waters Treaty that India must follow and the commission must secure and that India’s compliance with these obligations could and would be reviewed by international courts.

India is constructing the 330MW hydroelectric project with a dam at Gurez from where it intends to divert the entire winter flow through a tunnel and deliver water into Bunar, Madhmati, Nallaat, Bandipora in occupied Kashmir.

The court’s partial decision is clear in this regard that it permits India to divert water for power generation but will determine limits and parameters of the diversion. The court will define a minimum flow regime and thus India will be unable to divert permanently complete winter flows over a period of six to eight months in a year.

The Indus Waters Treaty denoted the conclusion of protracted and taxing negotiations ending the canal waters dispute which had erupted in 1948. Unlike other water treaties, it created an inimitable paradigm by allocating entire rivers dividing the Indus system of rivers between India and Pakistan. While largely perceived to be an exemplary accord having endured two wars and constant strain between the two governments, some experts question its efficacy. They consider this view to be a misnomer as India’s disregard for the treaty began from its inception.

From its planned construction of Wullar Barrage in 1961, failures to release canal waters in 1965, Dul Hasti, Salal, Baglihar, Kishanganga, Nimoo Bazgo, Chutak, Uri-I to many other projects on the western rivers, India has ignored its treaty obligations and designed its projects as it saw fit.

The erroneous perception stems from Pakistan’s omission to take timely action against illegalities. India proceeded with the construction of works not permitted under the treaty and kept Pakistan engaged in correspondence and negotiations for years while taking their projects to a stage of a fait accompli.

India can divert only minimum water from Kishanganga: tribunal | Pakistan | DAWN.COM
 
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Pakistan needs to look inward instead of continually blaming India for all its woes. The crunch issue is extremely poor water management by the Pakistani authorities. Let's have a look....

Pakistan is moving from being a water stressed country to a water scarce country

Pakistan is fast approaching the limit of its water resources. Only a small quantity of water is left to mobilizing but Pakistan can
get much more value from the existing flows. Groundwater is being over-exploited in many areas, and its quality is fast
deteriorating.


There is clear evidence that groundwater is being over-exploited yet thousands of additional wells are being put into service every year. Depletion is now a fact in all canal commands. Furthermore, there are serious and growing problems with groundwater quality, a reality that is likely to get worse because there are 20 million tones of salt accumulating in the system every year.

The Maintenance Gap

Much of the water infrastructure is in poor repair. Due to a combination of age and the “Build/Neglect/Rebuild” philosophy of public works, much of the infrastructure is crumbling. This is true even for some of the major barrages which serve millions of hectares and where failure would be catastrophic. There is no modern Asset Management Plan for any of the major infrastructure.

The system is not financially sustainable. Users of canal water pay a very small part of the bill, which is basically paid by the taxpayer who provides much less than required for rehabilitation and maintenance of the assets and for operations. The result is that most infrastructure is in poor repair. The bulk of funding is used to pay the heavily overstaffed bureaucracies, whose productivity is low. This reality gives rise to a vicious circle, in which users are not willing to pay for poor and unaccountable services, which means that insufficient funds are available for operations and maintenance, which results in the decline of service quality and whereupon users are even less willing to pay.

The Trust Gap

Poor governance and low trust. Monopoly + Discretion - Accountability = Corruption. The result is inequitable distribution of water, poor technical performance and a pervasive mistrust and conflict, from the provincial off-take to the farmers fields. The water bureaucracy has yet to make the vital mental transition from that of builder of assets to that of a good manager of assets.

Pakistan's Water Crises.

This is typically a self inflicted wound. Instead of approaching international forums at the drop of a hat, Pakistan must first improve its water management per se if it wants to improve the productivity of water. Simultaneously, Pakistan will need to continue to invest in drainage and salt management, and to formulate national and provincial drainage and salt management strategies.

Otherwise your so called 'experts' will just keep bellyaching and blaming India for their own mismanagement, incompetence and inefficiency. In the meanwhile the farmers will continue to get a raw deal.

The best part is that yahoos like Hafiz Saeed and gang continuously spew nonsense about India 'stealing' water from Pakistan's share and use this issue as a political tool to bash India with, when the problem clearly lies within.
 
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I wish India and Pakistan be such a good neighbors in future that they can solve all their problems through bilateral talks and no need to bring west in their affairs

That was India's stand for long time now!

If You Look At The Indian Websites,They Are Presenting It As A Complete Indian Victory.

Business Line : Industry & Economy / Economy : Hague court upholds India

Yes it was a complete Indian victory! Diverting water was never on India's Plans! That is a conspiracy theory of Pakistan based mullah's!
 
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:lol: india never said it will divert any water from dam.

Dude... we are diverting the water. But the diverted water will also go to Pakistan. We are not storing that water.

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KHEP is designed to generate power by diverting water from a dam site on the Kishenganga/Neelum (within the Gurez valley, an area of higher elevation) to the Bonar Madmati Nallah, another tributary of the Jhelum (lower in elevation and closely located to Wular Lake) through a system of tunnels
"

We are within our rights to do so.

Yes it was a complete Indian victory! Diverting water was never on India's Plans! That is a conspiracy theory of Pakistan based mullah's!

We are diverting water but not into India. The diverted water is also going into Pakistan.
 
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India is only diverting the water from Kishanganga(Neelum) river to Jhelum river basin for power generation, not stealing.... so what is the fuss???

Pakistan is also diverting the water from Neelum river to Jhelum. Pakistan is constructing the Neelum–Jhelum Hydropower Plant downstream of the Kishanganga.
 
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HAGUE:
The International Court of Arbitration (ICA) has issued a partial award on the controversial Kishanganga hydro-electricity project (KHEP) in response to Pakistan’s appeal for ‘interim measures’ against the dam which may inhibit the restoration of the river flow to its natural channel.
ICA gave its decision on two disputes put forward before the court. In the first dispute, the court has allowed India to divert the Kishanganga-Neelum River as it considered the Indian project to be “run-of-the river” plant, meaning they do not require large storage reservoirs or cause major disruption to the flow.
However, the diversion will take place under strict conditions. Furthermore, the court has yet to determine the minimum downstream flow of the dam. The court’s decision requires Pakistan and India to supply data on flows by June 2013 with the final award in the case to be given in December 2013.
According to experts, as India does not know the quantum of water available to it, the Indian decision on the size of the power plant will have to be altered as full requirements will not be available as demanded by them before the court.

This decision went against India’s demand that the entire flows of the Neelum river during six to eight months of the winter season would be diverted into Wullar lake.
The second dispute was on the design and operations of the dam, which Pakistan said were in violation of the Indus Water Treaty (IWT). The court has clearly stated that drawdown flushing below the dead storage level was not permissible and that sediment flushing did not constitute an unforeseen emergency.
The court has also endorsed Pakistan’s strongly held view that the neutral expert’s decision in the Baglihar case was horribly wrong and in total violation of the provisions of the treaty.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 19th, 2013.


Controversial project: Hague court issues partial award on Kishanganga dam – The Express Tribune
 
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That was India's stand for long time now!



Yes it was a complete Indian victory! Diverting water was never on India's Plans! That is a conspiracy theory of Pakistan based mullah's!

LOL this is Hindu theory that it has win.........

BTW it is Pak's stand not yrs.
u only do what suits u.
 
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