NE NEWS SERVICE
CHENNAI, APR 26
An all-party meeting convened by the Tamil Nadu government on Monday resolved to allow Vedanta’s Sterlite Industries in Thoothukudi to produce oxygen for a four-month period amid surging covid cases, paving the way for the partial reopening of the copper smelter closed in 2018 over pollution concerns.
எனது தலைமையில் இன்று (26.04.2021) தலைமைச் செயலகத்தில், மாண்புமிகு உச்ச நீதிமன்ற கருத்தின்படி, ஸ்டெர்லைட் ஆலையில் பிராணவாயு பிரிவை மட்டும் தற்காலிகமாக செயல்பட அனுமதி அளிப்பது தொடர்பாக அங்கீகரிக்கப்பட்ட கட்சிகளின் கூட்டம் நடைபெற்றது.(1/2) pic.twitter.com/KWkhY32B1R
— Edappadi K Palaniswami – Say No To Drugs & DMK (@EPSTamilNadu) April 26, 2021
The unit was sealed by the state government on May 2018, days after 13 agitators were killed in police firing during a violent anti-Sterlite protest in the southern district.
On Monday, the Chief Minister K Palaniswami-chaired meeting, attended by main opposition party DMK among others, resolved to allow Sterlite produce oxygen from its plant in Tuticorin, days after Vedanta moved the Supreme Court in this connection.
‘As per the Supreme Court directive, power supply may be allowed for Vedanta’s Sterlite Industries in Thoothukudi for four months to repair and operate oxygen producing and related equipment only,’ the meeting resolved.
The period may be extended later but ‘at no cost’ shall other activities like copper manufacturing and running the co-generation plant shall be allowed and the ‘power supply shall be cut after this period (four months) by TANGEDCO,’ it added.
Tamil Nadu should get priority in the oxygen being produced here and it shall be taken to other states only after meeting its requirements.
On Friday, the apex court had said people were dying due to lack of oxygen and questioned the Tamil Nadu government as to why it cannot take over the Sterlite copper unit for producing oxygen to treat COVID-19 patients.
‘We are not interested that Vedanta or A, B or C runs it. We are interested that oxygen should be produced,’ a bench headed by then Chief Justice S A Bobde had said.