HomeNewsPoliticsDebate over Mullaperiyar dam’s safety continues

Debate over Mullaperiyar dam’s safety continues

Located in Kerala, the 126-year-old Mullaperiyar dam is owned, operated, and maintained by Tamil Nadu Government and meets the drinking water and irrigation requirements of at least five districts in the state

February 12, 2022 / 12:28 IST
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Image courtesy: mongabay.com
Image courtesy: mongabay.com

Though located geographically in Kerala, the 126-year-old Mullaperiyar Dam is owned, operated, and maintained by the Tamil Nadu government and has been a point of dispute between the two neighbouring states for decades. While Kerala maintains that the structure is weak and a new dam needs to be constructed in its place, Tamil Nadu has declared it as safe.

In a statement last month, speculated to be a political message to Kerala, the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin announced that the state would set up a statue of Colonel John Pennycuick, a British engineer instrumental in the construction of the dam, at a park at his hometown in the United Kingdom. This proposed statue, sponsored by the Tamil Nadu government, would be a token of gratitude for building the dam and diverting water from there to the arid villages and towns of the southern districts to address their drinking water and irrigation concerns.

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While Tamil Nadu is turning the dam issue into a sentimental one evoking the memories of the British engineer, Kerala has been strongly advocating the need to decommission the “deteriorated” structure and build a new one, citing climate change-induced erratic and heavy rainfalls that could further damage the structure. political leaders of Kerala argue that the dam is a ticking time bomb that can explode at any moment, causing deaths of thousands in the state. It maintains that razing down the existing weak structure and constructing a new dam is the only solution.  Tamil Nadu meanwhile considers it as a safe and well-maintained dam and is making persistent efforts to raise the water storage level in it to 152 feet through interventions in Madras high court, Supreme Court, Central Water Commission, and other top bodies.

Now, in the last week of January, the Central Water Commission (CWC) informed the Supreme Court that a new review of the safety of Mullapperiyar is due. In a status report before the apex court, CWC said that no review on safety was taken place for the last 12 years. However, the same report quotes Empowered Committee constituted by the Supreme Court in 2010 that noted that Mullapperiyar was found to be safe in all respects, hydrologically, structurally, and seismically.