…says project has no significant, irreversible impacts
While the new Demerara River bridge project is being exempted from conducting an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Executive Director Kemraj Parsram says that an Environmental Assessment and Management Plan will have to be done instead.
In a public notice on Wednesday, the EPA said it screened the environment permit application for the new bridge across the Demerara River and determined that “it will not significantly affect the environment” hence, it is exempted from conducting an EIA as outlined in Section 11 of the Environmental Protection Act.
Speaking with Guyana Times Parsram explained that while the full-scale EIA was not required to be done, an assessment was still needed so that the Ministry can outline how it intended to address the issues that are not significant or irreversible that were identified in the project before the permit was approved.
“Based on the information they provided to us and based on our site visits, we determined that we do not need a full-scale Environmental Impact Assessment. We just need an assessment to [address] some of the issues we identified in the screening and for them to propose how they intend to manage those minor issues. So, they’re not required to do a full-scale impact assessment; they are just to do an Environmental Assessment and Management Plan to deal with some minor issues that we identified which are not significant and are not irreversible,” he stated.










