Activists have challenged the Union environment ministry’s in-principle clearance to the proposed 300 MW hydroelectric project on the Alaknanda river before the National Green Tribunal. The project in Chamoli district of Uttarakhand is proposed three km downstream of the Hindu pilgrimage centre Badrinath. The project site is in the buffer zone of the Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve (NDBR), which has two World Heritage Sites—Nanda Devi National Park and Valley of flowers—and is home to endangered plant and animal species, including the snow leopard and Himalayan brown bear.
A petition, seeking quashing of the project, has been filed by Vimal Bhai of Matu Jansangthan, a social organisation and Bharat Jhunjhunwala, economist and former professor of IIM, Bengaluru in Delhi on January 31. The petitioners challenged the forest clearance accorded to the project, saying it is a threat to biodiversity in the region and has been rejected twice by the Forest Advisory Committee (FAC), the statutory body of the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF) that recommends forest clearances.