Top Turkish court annuls environmental report over failure to inform locals
Turkeyâs Council of State has annulled the environmental impact assessment report prepared for the construction of the Susuz hydroelectric power plant (HES) in the Black Sea province of Artvin, arguing in a landmark ruling that locals were not sufficiently informed about the effects of the facility.
The ruling was adopted after a three-year-long juridical battle, Radikal reported on Aug. 26. Lawyers have stressed that it could set a precedent obliging companies to formally secure local villagersâ assent before the construction of hydroelectric plants, which often damage the environment as well as the local economy.
Locals of Artvinâs ÅavÅat district had objected to the construction on the Arpalı River of Susuz, which ironically means âwithout waterâ in Turkish, on the grounds that 28 villages in the area could be left without water due to a significant reduction of the water levels in small streams.
But Halis Yıldırım, the lawyer representing the villagers, has accused the company of submitting a ÃED report full of flaws âprepared on the desk.â
âFor instance, the report said only three native species in the area were found. But some 15 plants were determined after the deficiencies were dispelled,â Yıldırım said.
He also said it was unacceptable for the Council of State to take two years before issuing a ruling on such cases. âIf during this time frame a tree, bird or even a stone has been negatively affected by the HES construction, whatâs at fault is the delayed State of Councilâs decision,â he said.
The construction of the Susuz plant was suspended first in 2012 by an administrative court in Rize, which had demanded a...
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