The green panel's direction came in the wake of a petition challenging the environmental clearance granted to the thermal power project on the ground that it violated the provisions of the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act of 1974.
Lalitpur Power Generation Co Ltd (LPGCL) had signed an agreement with the UP government in 2010 to set up 1980 MW (3 units of 660 MW each) super-critical thermal power plant in Lalitpur district between the banks rivers Sajnam and Utari.
"A team of officers from the Environment and Forests Ministry, Central Pollution Control Board, UP Pollution Control Board and UP's Irrigation Department would conduct an inspection and ensure that temporary abstraction of water from the Buragaon Check Dam is permitted without any adverse effect either on the agricultural activities or upon recharging of the ground water...
"The Committee shall also submit a report to the Tribunal that if unauthorised or even excessive drawal of water by the Project Proponent has caused loss of agricultural productivity to the dependent farmers, then extent of compensation payable to them," the bench said.
It also made it clear that once the pipeline is completed, the project proponent will not be permitted to draw any water from any of the check dam on river Sajnam.
The Tribunal was hearing a plea of UP resident Mohar Singh Yadav seeking quashing of environmental clearance granted to the plant, alleging that LPGCL could not have extracted water directly from the river or the check dams which were primarily meant for agricultural purposes.