While the issue
of pollution from coal-fired power stations is being debated around the world,
few residents can be so badly affected those who live near the Lakvijaya Power
plant at Norochchcolai on the southern end of Sri Lanka’s Kalpitiya Peninsula.
In recent
weeks they have been deluged in ash whipped up by the monsoon winds. Along with
the usual respiratory problems, even the fundamental activities of life have
become a challenge.
Not only did
it become impossible to dry clothes outside, but flying dust, ash and charcoal
settled on food.
“We simply
cannot cook; we have to buy pre-packaged food from the supermarket, but that is
too expensive for poor people,” one resident said.
As if this
were not bad enough, hot water from Lakvijaya is being pumped into the sea,
ruining the region’s fishing industry. Fisher Peter Warnakulasuria believes
this is illegal “but it has been going on for some time and no-one seems to
care”.
Those who
do care include members of Sri Lanka’s environmental movement, who have filed
cases against the power plant after receiving “plenty of promises but no
action”.
Local
Councillor M.C. Alexander is supporting the case. He says officials of the
Ceylon Electricity Board said they would plant a wall of trees to stop the ash
blowing into residential areas and even suggested they could store the ash and
sell it to the cement industry, but nothing came of either proposal.
“We have
been raising these issues for five years now. There has been plenty of time to
do something,” Mr Alexander said.
“Some of
the residents said they would move away if they had somewhere else to go, but
they are poor people. All that they have is here.”
Commissioned
in March, 2011, the power plant, the largest in Sri Lanka, has a history of
problems, including a series of breakdowns and outages, the most recent earlier
this year.
Allegations
that it was not built to international standards, have been laid at the door of
the previous Government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, with the contractors
claiming the particular materials used were agreed at the highest level.
All this wrangling
does nothing to alleviate the misery of the local inhabitants. Mr Alexander
said the area was once quite prosperous with thriving agricultural plantations.
Now the incessant rain of ash has created a wasteland.
“Nothing
grows here now — and unless something is done soon, nothing will grow here ever
again,” he said.
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