Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Friday, Jan 14, 2005

News
Features
Stocks
Port Info
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Info-Tech - IT-enabled Services


Environment Ministry clears GE's Jaipur call centre proposal

Mamuni Das

This is the first project to be cleared by an expert committee set up to do the environment impact assessment of new construction projects and industrial estates.

New Delhi , Jan. 13

THE Environment Ministry has cleared GE Capital International Services (GECIS) for construction of a call centre facility in Jaipur.

The new facility, which would come up at an estimated cost of Rs 20 crore, would house about 1,800 people working in three shifts, informed reliable sources.

This was, in fact, the first project to be cleared by an expert committee, set up by the Environment Ministry last month in order to do the environment impact assessment (EIA) of new construction projects and industrial estates as per the EIA Notification issued on July 7.

The notification had mandated an environmental clearance from the Centre for all new townships, industrial townships, settlement colonies, commercial complexes, hotel complexes, hospitals, industrial estates and office complexes that would require an investment of over Rs 50 crore.

The clearance from the Ministry is also required for those projects that would house over 1,000 persons or discharge sewage of 50,000 litres per day or more.

The 15-member committee, headed by Mr Paritosh C Tyagi, former Chairman of Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), will meet once every month to study various proposals.

For the GE facility, the committee has mandated installation of a sewage treatment plant, water harvesting system and energy conservation measures such as installation of solar panels, among others.

Apart from the GE call centre, another proposal awaiting clearance is from the Hyderabad-based Ramky Pharma City (India) Ltd, for construction of a Pharma City Project to be located at Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh.

The committee, which includes experts from the Indian Institute of Technology, The Energy and Resources Institute and National Productivity Council, will suggest safeguards, where feasible, to mitigate the adverse environmental impact and also pollution prevention devices.

The committee can also clear or reject proposals from environmental perspective with or without safeguards.

The Ministry has also received queries for about 215 housing and mall construction projects from the Sahara Group, said sources.

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page


Stories in this Section
TRAI pegs unified licence fee at Rs 180 cr — Three categories of licensing introduced


TRAI withdraws directive on Tata Tele ad
`Rural telecom consortiums can help get around ADC'
Tata Tele services in 3 more circles
TCS posts Rs 643-cr net in Q3
Rising rupee stunts iGate growth in Q3
Aztec net soars
AP to focus on hardware sector
Xenitis Info in manufacturing tie-up with Chinese co
Modular Info tool
Pervasive open source software
Satyam results on Jan 20
`Spams form 60 pc of e-mail messages'
BSNL, MTNL to launch broadband services today
Hathway launches Freeway broadband in Hyderabad
`Entertainment industry yet to gear up for digital era'
MS Research begins work on projects
Megasoft to issue shares to I-Labs
Environment Ministry clears GE's Jaipur call centre proposal


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | The Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2005, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line