Nepal’s West Seti Project Imbroglio: The Supreme Court Speaks
Kishor Uprety
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DOI: 10.4236/blr.2011.21003   PDF    HTML     5,059 Downloads   10,138 Views   Citations

Abstract

The history of Indo-Nepal water resource cooperation is a litany of dashed hopes, shelved projects, treaties lacking implementation, and mutual recrimination. The small-neighbor versus big-brother syndrome that pervades relations in every sphere invariably arouses suspicion of unequal benefits. In this context the West Seti Hydroelectric Project in far western Nepal, the biggest energy generation project, was also stymied for more than a decade. This Project’s fate was put on balance with a non-governmental organization moving the Supreme Court, alleging the Project would help India at Nepal’s expense, and asking the Court to stop it since it was “illegal” and went against “national interests”. The Court’s ruling, touching broadly upon the issues of national, international, and environmental laws, established a precedent of significant value which will impact if not reshape the nature of cooperative development in the region.

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K. Uprety, "Nepal’s West Seti Project Imbroglio: The Supreme Court Speaks," Beijing Law Review, Vol. 2 No. 1, 2011, pp. 17-24. doi: 10.4236/blr.2011.21003.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

[1] L. Johnson, “Advocacy Strategies for Promoting Greater Consideration of Climate Change and Human Rights in Development Activities: The Case of the West Seti Hydroelectric Project in Nepal,” Vol. 27, No. 2, Pace Environmental Law Review, 2010.
[2] A. Dixit, “Dui Chhimekiko Jalayatra,” The Water Trajectory of Two Neighbors, Actionaid, 2008.
[3] R. S. Shrestha, “Opinion,” West Seti Project. A Nepali Perspective, September 2008.
[4] West Seti Project Document (undated).
[5] B. Gautam and A. Shah, “Law Ministry Opposes West Seti Renewal,” Advises Against New Clauses, Republica, November 2009.
[6] Order of the Supreme Court, September 2009.
[7] B. Sangraula, “China bank to invest $1b in West Seti,” Kantipuronline.com, 2004.
[8] Interim Constitution of Nepal 2063, 2007.

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