The order to stop all work related to the Posco iron and steel project in Orissa may have come as a huge setback to the South Korean company but it is certainly not the end of the road.
Sources in the government told The Sunday Express that the violations of forest laws by the company were not such that cannot be corrected. If the company took remedial measures and followed due process of law,the possibility of work resuming on the project could not be ruled out,they said.
The $12-billion project in Jagatsinghpur district of Orissa is the single biggest foreign investment in the country and its success is considered crucial for Indias image as a friendly destination for foreign investment.
When contacted,Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said a solution could only be found within the framework of Indias environmental laws. I am acutely conscious of the larger strategic importance of the Posco project. I hope some way will be found out in accordance with the law of the land, he said.
His ministry had,on Friday,ordered the Orissa government to stop all work relating to the project because an expert committee had found violations of the Forest Rights Act. The project involves diversion of over 1,253 hectares of forest land for the purpose of constructing an integrated steel plant with an annual production capacity of 12 million tonnes.






