A preliminary investigation report on the recent oil
leakage in Tondiarpet found that the groundwater in the north Chennai
locality is severely contaminated with petroleum products.
Calling
for proper precautionary measures, the report warned that presence of
such highly inflammable products could result in explosions or fire.
The
investigating team of IIT-Madras professors said the contaminant found
in water was almost similar to diesel and suggested a detailed study to
locate the source of the oil spill or the leak.
At
the request of Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB), the team
headed by Indumathi Nambi, Associate Professor and Head, Environment and
Water Resources Division, Department of Civil Engineering, visited the
area where water in borewell was contaminated, allegedly due to leakage
from pipelines belonging to public sector oil marketing companies. The
team submitted its preliminary investigation report to the TNPCB.
The
report said: “Oil is continuously being bailed out for the past twenty
days [from the wells] and has not stopped, which indicates the presence
of [a] free flowing oil pool.” The IIT-M experts said: “The groundwater
is severely contaminated by petroleum products and will continue to be
so for several decades if no remediation is done.”
Rita
Chandrasekar, TNPCB counsel, submitted the preliminary report to the
National Green Tribunal, Southern Bench, comprising members Justice
P.Jyothimani and Professor R.Nagendran, which is hearing an application
by V.P.Krishnamoorthy of Old Washermenpet. The applicant sought various
reliefs, including a direction to shifting of pipelines from the area.
Coming
down on the Union Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas and oil
marketing companies for not filing replies, the Bench ordered them to do
so at the next hearing.
He wanted them to mention the steps taken to shift the pipelines and other remedial steps.
The
Tribunal also directed the TNPCB to undertake an expansive study
covering other localities of north Chennai and file a detailed report on
September 3.
Source: http://tinyurl.com/m5gyevf
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