Be’er Tuviya residents protest approval of gas plant
06/12/2012 06:07
C'tee approves plans for power station despite ongoing protests about environmental, security concerns from area residents.
Be’er Tuviya,Kiryat Malachi residents protest Photo: (Be’er Tuviya Regional Council
Hundreds of Be’er Tuviya and Kiryat Malachi residents protested outside the
building housing the National Committee for Planning and Building on Monday
after it approved plans for a new natural gas power plant in the
region.
Despite ongoing protests about environmental and security
concerns from area residents, the committee approved plans for the power
station, with representatives from the Environmental Protection and Defense
ministries abstaining from the vote, according to to Be’er Tuviya Regional
Council. The project is slated to be developed by Triple-M Power Plants
Ltd.
“I’m sorry that such critical decisions were made without examining
in-depth the risks involved with establishing the facility in this sensitive
area,” regional council head Dror Shor said in a statement released by his
office. “We have not lost hope and we will continue to use all means at our
disposal to shelve the plan.
I have said before and I say again, if a
plant will be established here, it will be regretted for
generations.”
The Regional Committee for Planning and Building is now
expected to publish the details of the plans for the purpose of public objects,
and then will be returned to the National Committee for Planning and Building
and then the government for approval, according to the regional
council.
On Sunday, Shor and Kiryat Malachi Mayor Chaim Steiner sent a
letter to the National Committee for Planning and Building, demanding that all
necessary environmental and health impact surveys on the region take place,
noting that this would be the first power plant “so close to public
receptors.”
Construction of a natural gas power plant in this region was
first promoted six years ago when Shikun V’Binui subsidiary IPM intended to
construct a 400-megawatt facility in cooperation with the company Gav Yam,
according to the Be’er Tuviya Regional Council. The partners eventually backed
out of the deal after encountering protests from the community, with Shikun
V’Binui selling its shares to Triple M, the council said.
In March, after
a barrage of Gazan rockets fell in the region, Be’er Tuviya residents launched a
public campaign against the construction of the natural gas power plant, sending
a petition to the High Court of Justice.
“This is the last place that a
power plant should be established,” Shor had said.
In response to the
power plant’s approval on Monday and the protests of the residents, Triple-M
ensured that proper environmental protection measures would occur, calling the
plans a “fitting balance among the national energy sector needs, environmental
protection, preservation of planning and transparent and balanced public
participation.”
“The advancement of energy production facilities based on
natural gas are essential nationally,” the company said in a statement. “The
transition to the use of natural gas instead of polluting fuel and coal will
ensure significantly cheaper energy and an improved quality of life for all,
while protecting the environment.”
The company ensured that the plant
would be built according to the world’s most advanced, cleanest, safest and most
aesthetic standards.
“We are convinced that the plant and that the
arrival of gas to the region will attract additional plants to consume natural
gas and will bring economic prosperity to Be’er Tuviya and Kiryat Malachi.”