EIA Guidelines for Airport

Authors

  • Giriraj V. Sadani  Civil Engineering Department, RMD Sinhgad School of Engineering, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Warje, Pune, Maharastra, India
  • Dashratha L. Mittapalli  Civil Engineering Department, RMD Sinhgad School of Engineering, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Warje, Pune, Maharastra, India
  • Prof. Prajakta Shete  Civil Engineering Department, RMD Sinhgad School of Engineering, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Warje, Pune, Maharastra, India

Keywords:

Environmental impact assessment (EIA), EIA process.

Abstract

Environmental impact assessment (EIA) was first introduced in India based on the Environmental Protection Act (EPA), 1986. But formally it came in to effect, when Ministry of Environment and Forest (MoEF) has passed a major legislative measure under EPA in January 1994 for Environmental Clearance (EC) known as EIA Notification, 1994. Subsequently, EIA processes have been strengthened by MoEF by a series of amendments. The current practice is adhering to EIA Notification, 2006 and its amendments. The pieces of evidence collected and analysis in the present assessment suggest that, despite a sound legislative, administrative and procedural set-up EIA has not yet evolved satisfactorily in India. An appraisal of the EIA system against systematic evaluation criteria, based on discussions with various stakeholders, EIA expert committee members, approval authorities, project proponents, NGOs and consulting professionals, reveals various drawbacks of the EIA system. These mainly include; inadequate capacity of EIA approval authorities, deficiencies in screening and scoping, poor quality EIA reports, inadequate public participation and weak monitoring. Overall, EIA is used presently as a project justification tool rather than as a project planning tool to contribute to achieving sustainable development. While shortcomings are challenging, Government of India is showing a high degree of commitment. The EIA system in the country is undergoing progressive refinements by steadily removing the constraints. The paper identifies opportunities for taking advantage of the current circumstances for strengthening the EIA process.

References

  1. Environment Guidelines for Airport Projects, By Ministry of Environment and Forest, 1989.
  2. Conducting EIA for Developing countries by Prasad Mudak and Asit
  3. Guidelines for Impact Assessment in Development Assistance. Finnish International Development Agency, FINNIDA. Draft, 1989.
  4. Working Group for 11th five year plan, dated 25-06-2006.
  5. International Conference on Aviation, Aero India 2007 Bangalore, 8-9 February 2007.
  6. Airport Authority of India.
  7. ADB Annual Report.
  8. http://www.ibef.org

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Published

2016-08-30

Issue

Section

Research Articles

How to Cite

[1]
Giriraj V. Sadani, Dashratha L. Mittapalli, Prof. Prajakta Shete, " EIA Guidelines for Airport, International Journal of Scientific Research in Science, Engineering and Technology(IJSRSET), Print ISSN : 2395-1990, Online ISSN : 2394-4099, Volume 2, Issue 4, pp.251-256, July-August-2016.