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Arunachal Pradesh, with its vast hydropower potential exceeding 50,000 MW, is positioning itself as a key player in India’s renewable energy landscape.
The Athunli HEP, a 680 MW project in Dibang Valley, is sanctioned in August 2023 via an agreement with Sutlej Jal Vidyut Nigam (SJVN). It affects seven villages—Athunli, Malinye, Apanli, Sunli, Gunli, New Echanli, and Chiya—home to approximately 40 families (240 residents).
However, the promise of compensation under the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition Rehabilitation and Resettlement (RFCTLARR) Act, 2013, has triggered opportunistic construction, dubbed “ghost villages,” aimed at exploiting land acquisition processes.
This issue mirrors a historical precedent along the Trans-Arunachal Highway, where over 700 illegal structures emerged between 2021 and 2023, leading to a multi-crore scam and subsequent arrests. The recurrence of this tactic in 2025 underscores systemic challenges in managing large-scale infrastructure projects.
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According to media reports, hundreds of concrete and semi-concrete structures have been built in the Athunli HEP-affected areas since late 2024. These far exceed the number of genuine residents, suggesting a coordinated effort to inflate compensation claims.
These construction surged after the preliminary land acquisition notification on October 4, 2024, despite a subsequent notice on February 4, 2025, banning such activities.
Nadim Lombo, chairman of the Athunli Project Affected Peoples Committee (APAPC), defends the constructions as a “right” to offset property losses, arguing that the administration failed to adequately inform villagers of the October 2024 cut-off. He has also threatened to boycott the baseline survey unless compensation is assured or the project is scrapped.
On February 4, 2025, Dibang Valley Deputy Commissioner Pagli Sora issued a notice under Section 11(4) of the RFCTLARR Act, declaring post-October 4, 2024, constructions ineligible for compensation. This aims to deter further illegal building.
Fraudulent claims could drain state funds, undermining hydropower projects critical to Arunachal Pradesh’s goal of becoming a revenue powerhouse, as emphasized by Deputy Chief Minister Chowna Mein’s “decade of hydropower” vision.