By Ramaswami Ashok Kumar, B.E.,M.E.,Negentropist, Bombay Sarvodaya Mandal, 299, Tardeo Road, Nana Chowk, Mumbai-400007.
Revision 1 31-05-2021
© 2021
Ramaswami Ashok Kumar
Re: Tanveer Kaur, and Rajeev Kumar, “Impact of Parbati Hydroelectric Power Project Stage-II on the Interdependence of Ethno-Botanical Resources and the Inhabitants of the Parbati Valley in Kullu District of Himachal Pradesh.” Applied Ecology and Environmental Sciences, vol. 7, no. 4 (2019): 117-127. doi: 10.12691/aees-7-4-1.
1. The authors may share the exact numbers of each
species for all the species enumerated in the study area during the period of data
collection along with the date on which enumeration was done. This will help
determine the number of threatened species and their IUCN rank. Some species are common, others are less
common and many are rare, may be a couple of plants only in the area for the
rare ones. So this data will be a ready
reckoner to monitor the species diversity from time to time. Note that Parbati
III is working even though Parbati II is under construction.
2. The
authors have an assessment of the nallas drying up and this is critical for the
ecology of the region. Also the impact on the communities in the region by
depriving them of the natural commons wealth by identifying the species
scarcity affecting the people is very useful for further work.
3. An
assessment of the fundamental physiological services rendered by the plants and
the fauna and their interconnections is needed and compared with that provided
by the projects.
4. An
impact study of the world’s dams on the projects shows that the root cause of
the regular tunnel collapses in the area and elsewhere is the dynamics of the world’s
dams in tune with the hydrological cycle.
5. The altering of the ecology of the world’s regions
by dams. Dams divide the area into
upstream and downstream areas and inflict on the area suddenly changing water
regimes from instant to instant. Feeder
tunnels stop the natural regime in its tracks. This ubiquitous man-made changes
to nature disturbs the species balance- both fauna and flora and exposes the
human beings to pandemics like the present COVID19. An audit for example of the
Kullu tunnel collapse area shows that the power flow through the forest area of
Himachal Pradesh far exceeds(ball park estimate: an order of magnitude more) the
power generated by the hydroelectric plants.
The multi natural input multi natural output nature is infinitely superior in
meeting man’s needs for a long long time by automatic reproduction into evolved
forms(Table 1a).
Figure P2: The contrasting ecological diversity of the area
6. The
exercise of providing the world demand of water for power and other demands by
reservoirs by damming rivers and tunneling off the water from tributaries is
causing climate change by direct heating up of the earth causing earthquakes, cyclones,
flash floods, cloud bursts, avalanches and is now actively engaged in the
flattening of the Himalayas(Witness just this year’s Chamoli disasters, the
tunnel collapses in the Himalayas, avalanches, extreme rains and droughts,
forest fires, buildings and cars ablaze, ships catching fire, nuclear disasters
from Chernobyl to Kashiwasaki Kariwa,Fukushima and even Narora).
Check out the
facts at Ramaswami Ashok Kumar. PERFECT DESIGNS. Blogspot for STARTERS. Then
study my complete profile there for some vital answers regarding the ills of
modern civilization.
Re:
What is missing from
UN report? The contribution of dams to the quick full suicide of modern
civilization. Did you know that NHPC is even today CLEAR FELLING CLIMAX
FORESTS?
Dam caused
earthquakes, as they move from one earthquake to another, resulted in the
destruction of tunnels by rockburst because of millions of Kelvin temperature
shock input to masses of rock in Kullu every second! See the COVID19 signal from nature because
of man-made climate change(Figure 1).
Figure 1. World Dam Dynamics as it played out on 21-05-2021 at 1730 h IST.
The Parbati Hydro
Projets have the potential for permanently
unstoppable geomorphic changes
The amount of
Himalayan Rock that could be potentially moved by dam content changes like just
this one exceeds by three orders of magnitude the geomorphic mass that could be
moved by 1000 one megaton thermonuclear bombs(1). Further, such hydro projects
may possess capacity for instantaneous geomorphic change concentrated in
specific places, a frightening aspect of human geomorphic potential and the proliferation
of such projects should be avoided at all costs. The total movement of earth
material by this process is roughly equivalent to the total combined movement
of material by mining, agricultural, road building, and other human activities
each year. An estimated 3.8×109 tons of material are moved by mining each year
in the US alone (Hooke, 1994; see Chapter 13.6).(1). However, many nuclear devices and/or the combined effect of the world’s dams could disrupt geomorphic systems in
ways that could initiate on-going geomorphic changes. Thus the effect of the
world’s dams, and destabilization of vegetation and ground cover, could
initiate catastrophic geomorphic responses beyond the work of the initial
explosions. Study Table 1 which is self explanatory. Exactly at the time of the earthquake on 21-05-2021 at
12hrs UTC the tunnel collapse commenced. Lives were lost.
References
1. https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/earth-and-planetary-sciences/thermonuclear-explosion
2Earthquake data from USGS Earthquake Search website and EMSC-CSEM.
3Ramaswami Ashok Kumar. Blogspot. My Complete Profile.