HomeNewsEnvironmentJoshimath Sinking: Tunnel one km away from Joshimath and 600 metres underground, NTPC officials tell power ministry

Joshimath Sinking: Tunnel one km away from Joshimath and 600 metres underground, NTPC officials tell power ministry

The Jal Shakti ministry has appointed a panel which is investigating the Joshimath subsidence incident and the panel does not include any representatives from the power ministry or NTPC.

January 11, 2023 / 18:34 IST
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Cracks appeared in 68 more houses on Monday taking the number of subsidence affected homes in Joshimath to 678.
Cracks appeared in 68 more houses on Monday taking the number of subsidence affected homes in Joshimath to 678.

The 12-kilometre-long head race tunnel (HRT) of the now controversial Tapovan Vishnugad hydroelectric power (HEP) project is a kilometre away from the main city of Joshimath and is at least 600 metres below the ground - this is what NTPC officials have informed the power ministry to explain that the company’s HEP project has no role in the subsidence of the region, sources told Moneycontrol.

On January 10 evening, the power ministry summoned officials of state-run NTPC Limited to review the subsidence incident in Uttarkhand’s Joshimath region. “NTPC’s director projects Ujjwal Kanti Bhattacharya gave a detailed briefing to the power secretary Alok Kumar. The facts stated by NTPC are that the tunnel is a kilometre away from the city and is 600 metres deep. Besides, NTPC stated that the tunnel was made in 2011 and that back then or in so many years, no such complaints of mass subsidence were ever reported,” said a senior official privy to the development requesting anonymity.

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NTPC also told the power ministry that there was no active construction work happening in the area for about two years. “It also cited an old inquiry report of the same tunnel in which the National Institute of Hydrology said that there was no correlation between the water ingress in the tunnel and any outside water,” said a second official requesting anonymity.

The company, which is India’s  largest power generator, also placed before the ministry a 2010 report which was commissioned by the district magistrate of Chamoli in 2009 and prepared by members from the national institute of rock mechanics, IIT Roorkee, Wasia Institute of Himalayan Geology and National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI). A part of the report stated that “there is no ground evidence of any instability induced by HRT excavation using a tunnel boring machine.”