Date:26/04/2007 URL: http://www.thehindu.com/2007/04/26/stories/2007042613040400.htm
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Karnataka - Bangalore

Hydel power plant: State to move Cauvery tribunal

Special Correspondent

Cabinet approves draft of clarificatory plea


  • Plan is to build the plant at Mekedatu
  • Rs. 13-crore loan to KMF to be treated as grant

    Bangalore: In its clarificatory petition to be filed before the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal (CWDT) in a few days, the State Government is expected to seek the tribunal's intervention for the construction of a hydel power plant at Mekedatu along the Karnataka-Tamil Nadu border.

    Briefing presspersons on the decisions taken at a meeting of the Cabinet here on Wednesday, Minister for Home M.P. Prakash said the draft of the clarificatory petition had been approved by the Cabinet.

    Advocate-General Uday Holla briefed the members of the Cabinet on the salient features of the clarificatory petition.

    No clarity

    It was said that although there was a mention in the final award of the CWDT on the demand of Karnataka for a hydel power plant across the Cauvery there was no clarity on it.

    The plea of Karnataka was to construct a power plant and thereafter release the water.

    In other words, the State would like to construct a reservoir close to the border for operating the power plant before the river water makes its way to the Stanley Reservoir at Mettur.

    The other salient features of the clarificatory petition included the need to take into account the underground water in the Cauvery delta, the need for the State to account for release of water to safeguard the environment, etc. Karnataka has also sought permission for diversion of Cauvery water allocation made to Kerala from the Kabini until such time Kerala decides on the construction of a reservoir.

    An all-party meeting held about a month ago under the leadership of Chief Minister H.D. Kumaraswamy and Deputy Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa had unanimously resolved to file two petitions in the Supreme Court — an original suit (under Article 131) and a Special Leave Petition (under Article 136), besides a clarificatory petition under Section 5 (3) of the Inter State River Water Disputes Act.

    The SLP has since been filed and the next to be filed would be the original suit.

    It was also left to the legal experts to choose the timing of filing the petitions, as Tamil Nadu had also decided to file a clarificatory petition before the tribunal, and was likely to monitor the developments in Karnataka.

    The State obviously does not want Tamil Nadu to get scent of the contents of the Karnataka petitions before they are filed, nor file it too far ahead of the 90-day deadline prescribed for the purpose, which expires on May 6.

    Other decisions

    The other decisions of the Cabinet included converting a loan of Rs. 13 crore given to the Karnataka Milk Federation (KMF) between 1987 and 1990 into grant.

    The KMF was given the loan to undertake dairy development activities in the districts of north Karnataka and to enable the then Karnataka Dairy Development Corporation to acquire some private milk dairies.

    The KMF is now generating profits, but has refrained from paying up the loan since it required funds for further expansion of its activities. Minister for Public Works and Energy H.D. Revanna is the chairman of the KMF.

    Office complex

    Mr. Prakash said the Cabinet also approved the construction of a government office complex in Hassan at a cost of Rs. 5.70 crore, granting to the second bidder (FE Minerals Private Limited) the modernisation of the Hutti Gold Mines at a cost of Rs. 68 crore and withdrawal of criminal cases registered against Catholic Christians of Mysore who protested in 2003 against the appointment of Anthony Valapillai of Kerala as the area chief, among others.

    The Cabinet also authorised the Chief Minister and the Deputy Chief Minister to finalise the appointment of a chairman for the Karnataka Administrative Tribunal.

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