Govt refutes reports in Indian media:
No plan for nuclear power plant in Sampur
by Ananda KANNANGARA
The Government yesterday categorically denied Indian media reports
that Sri Lanka was planning to build a nuclear power station in the
Sampur area with Pakistani aid.
“The Government has not discussed such a proposal with any country or
organisation. We have no intention to go ahead with a nuclear power
plant. Any reports to this effect are completely fabricated,” Power and
Energy Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka asserted.
The Minister was referring to reports in several Indian newspapers
and websites that Sri Lanka had engaged in discussions with Pakistan on
setting up a nuclear power plant in Sampur, Trincomalee. It was also
mentioned that the Indian Government had called for a report on this
matter from its High Commissioner in Sri Lanka and that he had submitted
such a report to New Delhi.
The Minister, who said he was unaware of any such development, noted
that Sampur has only one power project – the coal power project to be
implemented in collaboration with the National Thermal Power Corporation
(NTPC) of India.
Work on this 500 MW project that could potentially link the power
grids of the two countries will start in due course. “In this backdrop,
it is unfortunate that some sections of the Indian media are painting a
wrong picture on the situation,” the Minister told the media in Colombo.
He stressed that Sri Lanka, as a sovereign nation, need not seek
permission from any quarter to commence power projects or other
development projects.
The Minister is working according to a long-term schedule to increase
the country’s power generation capacity. Grid substations will be set up
in Colombo, Hambantota, Kalpitiya and Trincomalee as part of this
expansion plan. This will help overall development efforts in these
areas.
Meanwhile, the CEB last week successfully addressed the technical
issues at the Norochcholai coal power plant and the combined diesel
plant which necessitated the first pre-announced power cuts in more than
a decade. Sri Lanka is one of the few countries in the region which
supplies power uninterrupted.
|