Mumbai: The Central government is set to form an independent  regulatory authority, which will be responsible for nuclear safety and  enforcement of safety standards. A bill to that effect will be  introduced in the monsoon session of Parliament this year, Union  Minister of State for Environment and Forests Jairam Ramesh said on  Wednesday.
Mr. Ramesh was talking to journalists on the sidelines of a convocation ceremony at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences here.
The Minister agreed that for more than half a century there was no  transparency in the nuclear energy programme in the country. “I admit  that our nuclear energy programme must be transparent, accountable. It  was not. I admit that the government should communicate with the people  and take them into confidence about the nuclear programmes,” he said.
Mr. Ramesh said that considering the rising population, India would  have to create 8-11 million jobs per annum. “No other country in the  world has such a big challenge. For that kind of growth we will require  energy. For the foreseeable future, I do not see any alternative to  coal, hydel and nuclear power for fulfilling such energy needs,” he  said, adding that the share of nuclear energy would increase from 3 per  cent to around 6 per cent in the next 20 years.
Endosulfan
Talking about endosulfan, Mr. Jairam said India was part of an  international agreement to phase out the insecticide in the next 11  years. “We have to develop cost-effective alternatives to endosulfan. We  are committed to using pesticides which are safe,” he said.
He said the insecticide had a disastrous effect only in Kasaragod in  Kerala and it had not created any big problem in Orissa, Bihar and  Punjab. “In 1998, the State plantation corporation of Kerala  indiscriminately indulged in aerial spray of endosulfan on 10,000  hectares of cashew plantation. So far, the only district where such a  large-scale negative impact has been seen is Kasaragod.”
He said there had to be a proper study to ascertain if the problems  in Kasaragod were directly attributable to endosulfan. “I think if we  have evidence that there are adverse effects on human health, we should  take action.”
‘Don't paint me villain'
During the convocation ceremony, Mr. Ramesh was greeted by students protesting against the Jaitapur nuclear power plant project.
He said he had given clearance to the project in November last year  based on environmental factors. “Considering the concerns raised after  the Fukushima incident, the government has taken a large number of steps  to assuage public concern, but I cannot expect people who are opposed  to nuclear power on ideological grounds to change their minds,” he said.
He said, “the Prime Minister instructed [us] that when we construct  more than one reactor, each reactor would have stand-alone safety and  operational maintenance. This will stop the cascading effect, which  happened at Fukushima,” he said.
On the fact that Jaitapur was in a seismic zone, he said the entire country lay in a seismic zone.
“There is also a possibility of tsunami. But the last tsunami in the  Arabian Sea was in 1945 and it affected Balochistan. “We have to see the  possibility of tsunami hitting Jaitapur,” he said, adding that the site  was at such a height that it might not get affected due to tsunami.
“Don't paint me villain in the Jaitapur issue. There is need for  greater communication with the public, especially by the NPCIL and the  government of Maharashtra.”
He said the present growth in India was imbalanced. “We have growth  at all costs. It is imbalanced.” He was increasing awareness among the  policy-makers of the environmental cost of growth. “We also don't want  environmental protection at all costs. We need a balance,” he said.
 
 

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