A stony coral, or hump coral, classified as ‘near threatened’ in the IUCN Red List at Churna Island | Amanullah / National Institute of Oceanography
An existing and immediate threat to the island that experts fear is the 1,320-megawatt coal-fired power plant being built on the Hub coast. The Hubco power plant and Byco oil refinery site is approximately 12 kilometres from Churna Island.
A joint collaboration between Hubco Power Company Limited (Hubco) and a Chinese company, the two-billion-dollar project is part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor and was approved a year ago. Work on the project is going on at a rapid pace in the coastal part of Hub named Mouza Kund. This is where Hubco has been operating a thermal power plant for the last 22 years. Later, Byco Petroleum Pakistan Limited arrived there with an oil refinery and an offshore oil terminal.
Despite its distance from the island, the coal-fired power plant will still have an impact on the residents of the three villages nearby since smog, soot and aerosols travel long distances.
A recent visit to this area revealed the impact on human lives of the proposed and operational industrial activity. Residents of Allana Goth, Abbas Goth and Qadir Baksh Goth — the three villages located in the immediate vicinity of these plants — are deprived of basic facilities, such as water and electricity. Government health units are non-functional while there is only one functioning school and that, too, run by an NGO. One could see black smoke rising from the chimneys installed in the area, which the villagers believe to be the cause of increasing skin and lung diseases in the area. Protests against the companies recently resulted in registration of FIRs against 50 persons.
Lamenting that private companies have done little to alleviate their sufferings, most locals are against the under-construction coal-fired power project, seeing it as another risk to their health. The matter has been taken up by Mr Aslam Bhootani, former speaker of Balochistan assembly, with the environmental tribunal of Balochistan.
“Every single individual in these villages is ill and badly in debt. These companies have employed only a handful of locals on menial jobs while the rest, dependent on fishing, are jobless since there is no fish left in the waters being continuously polluted by hazardous discharge from these installations,” says a local named Gul Hasan.
Defending the operational projects, Hubco and Byco officials stated that their companies had always demonstrated compliance to national and international environmental standards and would do so in the future. Monitoring reports by third parties, they said, were regularly submitted to Bepa.
“The upcoming project is a super critical power plant in which the company is installing 60 million dollars worth of equipment only to keep the environment safe from pollutants,” says Hubco chief executive officer Khalid Mansoor. “The strong opposition seen in the project’s public hearing held last year was politically instigated. No doubt that things have been blown out of context and people misled.” He also rejected the villagers’ complaints over emissions and questioned how, if this were true, the Hubco staff who works in the area has not been affected by these pollutants.
Both Hubco and Byco maintained that they were engaged in a number of community initiatives including installation of solar panels, on-job training, large-scale job opportunities and, recently, provision of water via tankers as part of their corporate social responsibilities. But, they admitted, that living conditions in villages were extremely poor and required government attention.
“We can’t replace the government no matter how much we do for villagers,” says Mansoor, adding that the company under its agreement with the government couldn’t supply electricity to the village as this would be considered an “illegal” activity.
Paradise lost