Introduction
The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) is a preventive system requiring environmental clearance before a project begins. In 2025, the Supreme Court’s Vanashakti judgment banned all post-facto clearances as unconstitutional. In a new 2:1 ruling, the Court has now recalled that decision, warning that continuing the ban would cause “devastating” consequences and jeopardise major public investments. This marks a clear shift away from earlier strictures on environmental approvals.
Why in the news?
The Supreme Court’s recent endorsement of post-facto environmental clearances marks a sharp break from earlier rulings where such permissions were held illegal. For the first time, industries operating without prior approval may regularise their violations by paying penalties. This undermines the preventive purpose of Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs), weakens compliance in a country already facing severe pollution challenges. The ruling enables violators to bypass mandatory safeguards like public hearings and ecological assessments, allowing large-scale industries to operate first and seek approval later.
Understanding Ex Post Facto Environmental ClearancesMeaning and Basic Idea
Intended Purpose: Rare exceptions: Initially justified only for unusual situations where procedural lapses occurred without deliberate violation. Actual Use: Regularisation tool: Gradually used to “legalise” ongoing or completed activities that had bypassed due environmental scrutiny. Legal Context
Supreme Court’s Stand in the Vanashakti Judgment (2025) Key Findings
Judicial Observations
|
How Does the Ruling Change India’s Environmental Safeguards?
- Shift from Prevention to Regularisation: India’s environmental law is built on prior approval, but the ruling legitimises post-violation approvals. This weakens deterrence and changes the core architecture of environmental governance.
- Dilution of Public Hearings: Many industrial activities will now bypass public consultations, one of the most important safeguards under the EIA process.
- Weakening of the No-Fault Liability Principle: Earlier, industries operating without clearance faced closure; now they may continue operating after paying monetary penalties.
- Increased Environmental Risk: Projects threatening forests, rivers, and air quality gain legal pathways to operate retrospectively, exacerbating existing ecological crises.
How Has Policy Drift in Recent Years Enabled Post-Facto Approvals?
- Draft EIA Notification 2020: Attempted to institutionalise post-facto approvals and reduce public participation, an approach the ruling now indirectly validates.
- Forest Conservation Act Amendments (2023): Redefined “forests” to exclude large tracts of land, enabling diversion without scrutiny and bypassing earlier safeguards.
- Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Dilution (2018): Relaxed no-development zones and allowed extensive construction in vulnerable coastal areas.
- Expansion of Exemptions: Over 45 industrial categories have been exempted from prior clearances in the past decade.
- Legalisation of Violations: Historical decisions like TN Godavaraman protected forests strictly, but recent changes enable easier diversion and commercial use.
Why Is the Ruling Especially Concerning for India’s Current Environmental Crisis?
- Extreme Pollution Levels: With 83 of the world’s 100 most polluted cities in India, any weakening of safeguards directly harms public health.
- Children’s Health Impact: Delhi’s children lose up to 10 years of lung function, highlighting the urgency of strict compliance.
- Carcinogenic Exposure: Farmers in Punjab and Haryana inhale toxic particulates every winter, worsening respiratory health.
- Hospital Overload: Urban hospitals deal with chronic respiratory disease surges every winter.
- Climate-Driven Disasters: Cyclones, erosion, and floods already strain ecosystems; weaker laws increase vulnerability.
How Does the Ruling Affect Democratic Accountability?
- Reduced Public Participation: By enabling post-facto approvals, the ruling sidelines communities, especially those in pollution-affected regions.
- Bypassing Transparency: Industries may avoid public hearings and statutory scrutiny.
- Weakening of Citizen Rights: The apex court’s earlier stance held the environment as part of Article 21’s right to life; this shift undermines that framework.
- Centralisation of Power: State-level mechanisms become redundant if industries secure clearances retrospectively.
What Long-Term Risks Does the Judgment Create?
- Systematic Legal Erosion: A decade-long pattern of exempting industries and diluting norms is now legitimised judicially.
- Encouragement of Violations: Industries may prefer paying a penalty over compliance, cheaper and faster.
- Increased Ecological Degradation: Forests, rivers, coasts, and air quality may deteriorate further due to weakened oversight.
- Regulatory Capture: Industries gain disproportionate influence over environmental decision-making.
- Undermining Global Climate Commitments: India’s commitments under the Paris Agreement require stronger, not weaker, compliance frameworks.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court’s endorsement of post-facto clearances marks a turning point in India’s environmental jurisprudence. While the ruling attempts to balance economic development and compliance, it risks normalising illegality and weakening safeguards that exist to protect public health, ecological integrity, and constitutional rights. At a time of worsening pollution and climate vulnerability, India needs stronger, not diluted, environmental governance.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2014] What role do environmental NGOs and activists play in influencing Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) outcomes for major projects in India? Cite four examples with all important details.
Linkage: With post-facto clearances weakening formal EIA safeguards, NGOs become vital watchdogs ensuring accountability. This topic links directly to environmental governance, EIA dilution, and current judicial-policy debates.
Get an IAS/IPS ranker as your 1: 1 personal mentor for UPSC 2024

