Thursday, April 17, 2008

turtle trouble


click. help. smile.


http://www.greenpeace.org/india/turtles/write-to-tata

18 comments:

Mee said...

did u see the school kids programme that was put together? awesome!

Unknown said...

This feels like a attempt of a shopkeeper to sell a product to the buyer rather than creation of awareness about the port and the olive ridley turtles.

anitha said...

Hey, it’s nice to know that you know what you are talking about.
Now for a change may be you all should go through this site (http://www.eco-dhamra.com/) for further clarifications.
(http://www.aamaraodisha.com/)... To know the TRUE picture of all the happenings

anitha said...

Greenpeace claims itself to be an organization that recons itself with justice …claims itself to be the only savior of Mother Earth. But over the years, its superficiality has come to surface. The way it has dealt with all the principal features of any movements, seems to be only done for visibility. Maybe its time for them to grow up!

Anindita Gahur said...

Greenpeace claims itself to be the only savior of Mother Earth. But over the years, its superficiality has come to surface. It seems that most of the movements were mainly done for visibility. Maybe its time for them to grow up!

Anindita Gahur said...

I am an Oriya too... I understand what the greenpeace is trying to say, as my forefathers were all fishermen and we could grow only because MOTHER NATURE wanted us to blossom. But I still don’t understand HOW is the Dhamra Port affecting the arribada of the Olive Ridley Turtles... its miles away.

anitha said...

What is getting difficult to comprehend is the fact that WHY can’t both the things be done amicably. No body’s inhuman enough to build a ‘castle on carcass’. The TATA’s have always been extremely forthright in their code of conduct. All this hullaballoo is really not necessary. If it’s so imperative that the port construction needs to be accessed, then why aren’t the Greenpeace people agreeing to come to the table. And do you really believe that anybody who speaks against or for a person or organization is a part of that or the other organization?

Anup Mahanta said...

This kind of publicity will get them nowhere and after sometime people will completely lose face and faith in Greenpeace. In a way it’s already started to

Anup Mahanta said...

13. Why don’t the Greenpeace people come up with an alternative? It is evidently clear that the DPCL are doing their best to improve the living conditions of the people there.
Check out this site for more info on that… http://www.aamaraodisha.com/
So why does Greenpeace want to STOP progress… Isn’t it in the fundamentals of all NGOs to get justice without harming anybody…

Unknown said...

TATA are just being easy targets due to the introduction of Nano.

Unknown said...

Recently came across exciting news about Record Mass Nesting of Olive Ridley turtles in Gahirmatha beach this year inspite of Dhamra Port construction…

Annual rendezvous of Olive Ridley turtles begins

Unknown said...

Just would like to share a youtube video:

TURTLES ARE BACK IN ORISSA COASTLINE

Anonymous said...

Light and lighting are crucial for any industrial project, both during construction and the operational phase. IUCN lighting experts and DPCL are also taking care of implementing lighting safeguards, which would also be turtle safe lighting and would be low pressure sodium vapor lights which have been proven by research to be the least disorienting to turtle hatchlings.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=296928&id=168851070709

Anonymous said...

"Expressing anguish over the Green Peace movement's single point agenda on stopping work on Dhamra Port project in Orissa, Tata Steel Chairman Ratan Tata reiterated that the company would in no way take up any project hazardous to Olive Ridley Turtles"

Mr Ratan Tata Chairman of TATA Steel to Greenpeace activists: "I invite you for a discussion and a visit to the port site in Dhamra."

Tata proved that Tata was always willing to have a best solution for country's industrial & economical development and they were always ready for solutions.

http://steelguru.com/news/index/2009/08/29/MTA5MDgw/TATA_Steel_invites_Greenpeace_activists_for_talks_on_Dhamra_Port.html

http://www.indopia.in/India-usa-uk-news/latest-news/661058/Business/4/20/4

http://www.newkerala.com/nkfullnews-1-100917.html

Unknown said...

Greenpeace, the professed global environment campaign organization, in an instance of unmatched brazenness, falsified the report prepared by North Orissa University on Biodiversity Assessment of Dhamra Estuary. As a result, a group of forty MPs wrote to the Ministry Of Environment and Forests to call on the bluff of Greenpeace. The Orissa Govt. therefore initiated action against Greenpeace proposing a ban on all its activities in the state.

However, after the 102nd Annual General Meeting of Tata Steel in Mumbai, Greenpeace unabashedly has started their tricks once again. This time it has managed to rope in Retd Admiral Ramdas and his wife Mrs. Lalita Ramdas on the issue of Dhamra port but as far as scientific reasoning goes, the issues raised are totally unfounded. We can just hope that the visit of the Ramdas’ to the site will help to stop meaningless agitations and clear the situation once and for all.

Unknown said...

Tata Steel has always maintained a strong focus on environment sustainability and environment management in all its operations. We have seen that in the issues regarding the construction of a deep-sea port at Dhamra in Orissa, the Company has been forthcoming in sharing the concerns of activists and ever willing to implement practical means of mitigating any adverse impact of port construction on the marine eco-system in that area. The Company has held at least eight to nine sessions of meetings with Greenpeace and other environmental organizations in the matter of Dhamra Port. Tata Steel has made it abundantly clear that it is willing to have further discussions in order to alleviate any unnecessary doubts that the dissenters may yet nurture against the project.

Here is an outline of events as they happened till date.

The JV agreement with L&T to build a port at Dhamra was signed by Tata Steel in 2004. At the very onset, discussions were initiated with WWF- India, BNHS, Mr Kartik Shankar, Mr Bittu Sehagal and others.

The company was duly concerned with the objections raised by different environmental organizations and agreed not to begin construction work till a detailed study was complete. Responding wholeheartedly to the demands of activists, Tata Steel agreed for a proposal for a further study of the impact of the port on turtles and on the marine and island eco-system.

In 2005, BNHS and WWF-India, with an unprecedented suddenness, reversed their stand and refused to conduct the assessment study as they had promised. However, the organisations did not provide any reasons for their turncoat attitude.

In March 06, in an address to ED, Greenpeace India, the Chairman of TATA Sons made it clear that commitments were meant to be honoured at both ends. The Company had fulfilled their promise by withholding construction work for the proposed study, which never actually took off. The MD of Tata Steel also met Greenpeace officials in their Bangalore office.

In January 2008 a meeting was subsequently conducted between Greenpeace and Tata Steel and a list of concerns was presented by Greenpeace with regard to Dhamra Port. DPCL on 8th March 2008, gave a detailed and comprehensive explanation to all the points raised by Greenpeace. Subsequent objections were allayed on 3rd May 2008.

Further on 23rd October 2008, MD, Tata Steel along with senior executives of Tata Steel, L&T and DPCL met Greenpeace, BNHS, WPSI, Wild Society of Orissa, Sanctuary Asia and other environmental organizations to discuss the concerns and the way forward on the subject with regard to Dhamra Port.

A team of Company Executives and environment experts visited Bhitarakanika National Park, Gahirmatha Marine Sanctuary and the Dhamra Port site on February 2009, supervising the ongoing dredging operations.

Unknown said...

On fourth meeting on 20th Feb 2009 in Kolkata, Tata Steel, L&T and DPCL agreed to conduct the additional biological impact assessment in close collaboration with NGOs’ of environmental organizations team led by a mutually agreed upon Scientists team. However the NGOs’ in a further instance of unreasonableness, insisted upon complete cessation of on-going dredging operation of Dhamra Port even before the commencement of study. However DPCL, Tata Steel and L&T team showed it preparedness to adjust the schedule of works including dredging to facilitate the study after due recommendation by the Scientists team.

The 102nd AGM of Tata Steel had been attended by a number of Greenpeace activists who happen to be shareholders of the Company as well. The AGM highlighted Tata Steel’s interests in further conference with Greenpeace in the matter of the port in addition to an invitation to activists to visit the port site yet again.

From the sequence of events, it is absolutely clear that the only thing that Greenpeace wants is to prolong the situation of deadlock in the matter of Dhamra Port. Perhaps, due to a lack of other valid issues on their agenda, Greenpeace is carrying on with a stance of stiffness, lest they have to give in to valid scientific reasoning. The only deduction that may be drawn from Greenpeace’s lack of willingness in discussion is that they have lost their own conviction long before and fear that they will have to admit it as such in an open forum. It is indeed a very sorry state of affairs in which progress is kept at stake and the environment is being used as a pawn by people who profess themselves to be friends of the environment.

Unknown said...

http://www.d-r-a-g.org/river-system-facts/greenpeace-failure-arribada-continues-at-gahirmatha-nesting-beach.

In the blog post it is clearly mentioned that -

In order to facilitate the movement of large size vessels, a deep-sea port was proposed on the north of the mouth of river
Dhamra, on the eastern coast of India….

Unfortunately, ever since its inception, certain groups and individuals, mostly campaigners like Greenpeace have expressed
unfounded and biased apprehensions to malign the project as an environmental threat….

This video clearly narrates the
misconceptions that have been spread, and the actual facts to counter them…..