"We had received partial and conditional environmental clearance from the Ministry of Environment and Forests for the project in November 2010 for five years and we were asked to carry out pre-project compliances," Jaitapur Nuclear Power Project Project Director S Singharoy told PTI here today.
He said the Nuclear Power Corporation (NPCIL) is complying with all the necessary requirements of the MoEF and we are regularly submitting reports to the ministry.
Anti-nuclear plant activists have, however, written a letter to the ministry saying it should not accord any clearance to NPCIL and issue the state-run firm stop work notice.
"...There are serious repercussions and implications for the environment and nuclear safety which warrants a serious reexamination of the project. Since JNPP no longer has a valid environmental clearance, the NPCIL should stop work at the site.
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Meanwhile, NPCIL and Areva are still at negotiation stage even as they have entered into a pre-engineering agreement (PEA) which pertains to assessment of licenseability of the EPR project as per Indian laws, codes, guides, regulations, manuals, practices and general acceptability, as well as an informed understanding of the EPR technology itself.
This was followed by the signing of a general framework agreement between the two companies in December 2010, under which Areva is to supply nuclear islands and associated services for the first two EPRs planned for the Jaitapur site.