Sethusamudram Shipping Canal Project and the unconsidered high risk factors: Can it withstand them?

 

 

 

Dr.R.Ramesh M.B.,B.S.,

 

 

Doctors for Safer Environment,

Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

" I was about six years old when my father embarked on the project of building a wooden sailboat to take pilgrims from Rameshwaram to Dhanushkodi, (also called Sethukkarai), and back.

He worked at building the boat on the seashore, with the help of a relative, Ahmed Jallaluddin, who later married my sister, Zohara.

I watched the boat take shape. The wooden hull and the bulkheads were seasoned with the heat from wood fires.

My father was doing good business with the boat when, one day,

a cyclone bringing winds of over 100 miles per hour carried away our boat, along with some of the landmass of Sethukkarai.

The Pamban Bridge collapsed with the train full of passengers on it. Until then, I had only seen the beauty of the sea,

now its uncontrollable energy came as a revelation to me."

 

A.P.J.Abdul Kalam, in "Wings of Fire - An Autobiography"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To

the wellbeing of our friend

Ananda Ram Kumar

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Preface................................................................................................................................6

 

1. The Project ................................................................................................................9

 

2. The Design...............................................................................................................11

 

3. Sources for the database on theocean environs of the area-Index...................................................................................................13

 

4. The Data Base.........................................................................................................16

4.2 The Changing Physiography...............................................................17

Geomorphology

4.2.1.Vedaranniyam- Jaffna Peninsula sector..............................................17

4.2.2 Nagapttinam- Rajamadam Coast..........................................................18

4.2.3.Kodiakkarai Rajamadam coastline.......................................................19

4.3.4. Rajamadam- Manamelkudi coastline..................................................20

4.3.5. Raja madam- Devipattinam Beach Ridges........................................20

4.3.6. Berm Crest Data from Nagapattinam,

Point Calimere, Ammapattinam, Mandapam

And Rameshwaram (1977-1988).......................................................21

4.3.7. Beach Ridges, Terraces and

Coral Reefs at Pamban and Rameshwaram Island.........................22

4.3.8. Devipattinam - Kilakkarai Beach Ridges..........................................23

Sedimentation

4.3.9. Rameshwaram Island sand spit..........................................................24

4.3.10. Sediment Load to Palk Bay and Gulf of Mannar............................24

4.2.11. Study of suspended sediments

using remote sensing..........................................................................25

4.2.12. Physico-chemical parameters of Palk Bay........................................28

4.2.13. Longshore currents and sediment transport..................................30

4.2.14. Studies conducted on the Wave Climate, Tides

and Currents by the NEERI EIA.........................................................32

4.2.15. Studies on Sedimentary Transport

by the NEERI EIA.................................................................................37

4.2.16 Spit Configuration.................................................................................40

 

4.3. Cyclones .........................................................................................................42

4.3.1 General Information ...............................................................................42

4.3.2. Attributes of a Cyclone ............................................................... ...........44

4.4.3. Classification of the East Coast of India

based on Storm Surge values................................................................44

4.4.4. Consequences due to Cyclonic disturbances ........................... ........46

4.3.5. Frequency and Intensity of the Cyclones

of Bay of Bengal - The changing scenario ........................................47

4.3.6. Coasts most vulnerable for severe Tropical

Cyclone - Recent statistical elucidation.............................................48

4.3.7. Tamil Nadu Data.................................................................. ...................49

4.4.8. Cyclones of Palk Bay - some examples...............................................50

4.4.9. Miscellaneous information on

some Palk Bay Cyclones.........................................................52

 

4.4. Seismo-tectonics, Volcanism, Tsunami .................................... ...53

4.4.1. Earthquakes, Tectonics ..............................................................................53

4.4.2. Under Sea Volcanoes ..................................................................................54

 

5. Discussion ............................................................................................................55

5.1. The Issue ...................................................................................................55

5.2. General conclusions..............................................................................57

5. 3. The issue of Sedimentation...........................................................57

5.3.1. Net annual quantum of sediment

transported into Palk Bay - Problems

yet to be solved ......................................................................................57

5.3.2. Calculations on the extent of sediment

deposition in various sections of

the PalkBay - The yet to be

answered questions ...........................................................................60

5.4. Handling the Dredged Spoils..........................................................63

 

6. Conclusion ............................................................................................................66

 

7.References ...........................................................................................................67

 

A Personal Note...............................................................................................................71

 

 

 

 

Preface:

 

Sethusamudram Shipping Canal Project, when completed, will transform parts of the southern coromandal coast qualitatively. Since historical times, this portion of the coast (Palk Bay, Adam's Bridge) is used only to fleets of small crafts involved in coastal trading and fishing. Sethu Canal will transform this into a coast that shall start witnessing fleets of large vessels involved in overseas trading pass by.

Is the idea that a navigational channel in the Adam's Bridge-Palk Bay area can be dredged without any major hazard, based on a correct knowledge base? What are the environmental factors that might have the capacity to make this idea a failure? What are the actions that would be required to increase the chances of physical stability of the proposed channel?

These are the questions this monograph seeks to address.

 

Southern coromandal coast (South East Indian Coast or the south east Bay of Bengal coast - stretching from Pulicat to Kanyakumari) has a long history of shipping. Epics like Silappathiharam and Manimehalai (dated 600-900 A.D) have recorded the shipping activity of this coast. Written memoirs of the seafarers who had frequented this coast are available at least for the past 400 years. Pulicat, Sao Tome (now Chennai), Puducherry (Pondicherry), Cuddalore, Karaikal, Porto Novo, Nagore, Nagapattinam, Muthuppet, Adhirampattinam, Thondi, Alankulam, Rameshwaram, Periyapattinam, Kilakkarai, Kayalpattinam, Kulasekaranpattinam, Tuticorin were the important ports at some time in the past till three centuries back. Many of them have lost this status and have become mere fishing villages today. Chennai, Tuticorin, Cuddalore are the three ports that have continued with their status till the present time.

Overseas and coastal trading had flourished in this coast in the past. However, coastal trade was more prominent than the overseas ones. Out of the above mentioned ports, Pulicat, Sao Tome and Nagapattinam were the only ones that were involved in both the above said trades during the pre-modern times (prior to 1800 A.D.). Rice, textiles, areca, tobacco, saltpeter and horses were the main goods that these ports had handled.

Pulicat was the prominent port in the late 16th century. Sao Tome gained prominence in the first two decades of 17th century as Pulicat lost its glory. Sao Tome lost its prominence to Nagapattinam in 1630 and Nagappattinam retained this glory till the end of that century.

'The coastal trade was carried on in a relatively large number of small craft, in marked contrast to overseas trade which was carried on in a relatively limited number of sizable vessels. These coastal vessels ranged from mere dugouts to larger single-masted boats and were termed catamarans, phares, machuas, champans, tonis, and pagels... It is important to note that the relatively small individual sizes of these craft are more than compensated for by the size of the coastal trading fleets.' (Sanjay Subrahmanyam, 'The political economy of commerce : southern India, 1500-1650' Cambridge University Press, 1990, p-49)

 

The conclusions that we may arrive from the foregoing paragraphs are two: 1) The ports of the coromandal coast seem to have had a very short lived existence, 2) The sea trade in this area was dominated by coastal trade and hence by fleets of small vessels.

 

These two conclusions are important for us in this book.

 

Why did these ports have an ephemeral existence? What was the usual navigation route that the fleets of small costal trading vessels took and what were their navigational experiences?

 

Rise and fall of kingdoms and empires (fall of the chola, pandya kingdoms and the Vijayanagara Empire; rise and fall of the Portuguese and Dutch rule; rise of the English rule) was one of the most important factors for the short existence of many of these ports. Changing overseas market scenario was also a major factor. Apart from these political and economic factors, environmental, geological and oceanographic factors have played a very definitive role in determining the life period of each of these ports. We are interested in exploring these three factors in this book.

Coastal Navigation between Pulicat and Nagapattinam faces the open sea; between Nagapttinam and Kayalpattinam it is protected by the Sri Lankan land mass in the east and the Indian land mass in the west. We are interested (in this book) in the navigational experiences of the fleets of small crafts in this second area (named as the Palk Bay, Adam's Bridge and the Gulf of Mannar in the modern times).

 

The Sethusamudram Shipping Canal Project (SSCP) was first proposed in the year 1860. The idea was to cut-short the distance traveled (by avoiding circumnavigation of Ceylon) by ships originating from the west coast and bound for ports like Madras and Calcutta. These ships would travel through the Gulf of Mannar and Palk Bay and enter the Bay of Bengal.

Thus, for the first time an idea has been proposed to throw open the Palk Bay (where fleets small vessels have only operated from the time immemorial) to large vessels participating in overseas trade. However, this idea has remained in hibernation for the last 144 years.

1860 to 1922 saw nine different proposals presented to the British Raj. Govt., of India appointed the Sir.A.Ramasamy Mudaliyar Committee to study and give its opinion on the project in 1955. In 1968, it appointed Venkateswaram committee to evaluate the project once again. In 1981, the Ministry of Shipping and Surface Transport appointed Lakshminarayanan Committee to evaluate the project and present its comments. In 1996, the Tamil Nadu Government asked the Pallavan Transport Consultancy (PTCS) Ltd., to review the project and present its suggestions. After all these efforts, the Tuticorin Port Trust (TPT) commissioned the National Engineering Environmental Research Institute (NEERI), in 1998, to prepare a report on the status of the environment through which the channel will pass through. Once this Initial Environmental Evaluation (IEE) was ready, TPT commissioned NEERI to do an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for the proposed project in May, 2002. The EIA was completed and was presented to the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB) and the Ministry of Environment & Forests (MoE&F) for obtaining a clearance for the project in June 2004. Following this, the TNPCB had arranged a series of Public Hearings (PH) at various district headquarters to gather the opinions of those people who might be affected by the project and from the people who are concerned, in mid September, 2004. All these PHs were subsequently cancelled and were postponed to 20th to 25th November, 2004 as the TNPCB wished to gather furthermore opinion on the proposed project.

 

The NEERI EIA and the Technical Feasibility Report (TFR) state that the project is feasible technically and has the potential to operate without any environmental hazard. These two reports are the ones from which the current SSCP proposal draws its legitimacy. The present book analyses those portions of the EIA and TFR that are directly linked to the physical stability of the channel and offers a critique and suggestions.

 

The author of this monograph is a medical doctor and not a marine geologist or a meteorologist or a (macro) structural engineer. Hence, the inferences are made only after the original works are quoted extensively; This may, at times, seem to be a cumbersome process, but it will certainly help the readers of this book to refute the arguments of the author as the original works are in front of them to make their own conclusions.

 

R.Ramesh

16 November 2004

 

 

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