N4S
Court verdict ends post‑facto clearances, pushing India toward greener growth. UPSC likes to wrap this theme inside a rights question, much like 2015’s Diwali‑crackers case on Article 21; it will ask how judgments such as “Why the Supreme Court Struck Down Post‑Facto Environmental Clearances” reshape governance and balance growth with the right to life. Students often list data on bad air but forget to link it to constitutional hooks or to the broken approval chain flagged under “Institutional and Systemic Challenges,” so answers feel like fact dumps. This article fixes those gaps by walking you through each link in the chain: it shows the EIA gap (“EIA process was undermined”), the legal anchor (“Alembic Pharma 2020”), and the economic cost of inaction (pollution drains 1.3 % of GDP). The result is ready material to weave law, economics, and policy into one clear argument. The standout feature? The table in “Significance of the Verdict” turns big legal ideas into everyday stakes—health, jobs, global image—so readers can lift exact impacts (over 100 mining projects lose their shield) straight into a mains answer without sounding abstract.
PYQ ANCHORING
GS2: Does the right to clean environment entail legal regulations on burning crackers during Diwali? Discuss in the light of Article 21 of the Indian Constitution and Judgement(s) of the Apex Court in this regard.[2015]
MICROTHEMES: Fundamental Rights
India may be the world’s fifth-largest economy, but it’s choking on its own growth. Fourteen of the 20 most polluted cities are in India (IQAir, 2023), with Delhi’s AQI regularly shooting past 400 in winter — turning the air into poison. Pollution isn’t just a health disaster; it’s an economic one too. The Economic Survey (2022–23) says pollution-linked diseases drain 1.3% of India’s GDP every year. The World Bank pegs the broader cost of environmental damage at a staggering $80 billion annually.
Against this grim backdrop, the Supreme Court’s May 16, 2025 verdict struck down the Centre’s move to allow post-facto environmental clearances — calling them “illegal.” It’s a strong reminder that you can’t legalise damage and then pretend it’s green growth.
But the real questions include: Is judicial action enough to plug the holes in environmental governance? And most importantly — who should be held accountable when pollution becomes policy?
Why the Supreme Court Struck Down Post-Facto Environmental Clearances
India’s top court has drawn a clear line: you can’t break environmental laws first and ask for permission later. In a major ruling on May 16, 2025, the Supreme Court junked the Centre’s 2017 notification and 2021 Office Memorandum that allowed retrospective environmental clearances — essentially giving legal cover to projects that had already violated the law.
The Legal Logic Behind the Verdict
- EIA Process Was Undermined: The 2006 Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) rules demand clearance before a project begins. Granting it after the fact guts the whole point — public consultation, screening, and review are meaningless if damage is already done.
- Past Judgments Already Said No: In Alembic Pharma (2020) and Common Cause (2017), the Court made it clear — post-facto clearances go against environmental law and the precautionary principle.
- Violation of Article 21: The right to a clean and healthy environment is part of your right to life. The Court said that letting polluters off the hook like this tramples that right.
- Centre’s U-turns: The government first called the 2017 move a one-time fix — then extended it in 2021 and gave cover to over 100 violators, including big mining firms. The Court called it out for “going out of its way to protect polluters.”
The Constitutional Backbone of the Judgment
- Article 21: The Court slammed the idea that pollution control can be an afterthought. Right to life includes the right to breathe clean air — not beg for it after damage is done.
- Articles 48A & 51A(g): Both the State and citizens are constitutionally bound to protect the environment. The Centre’s conduct violated this duty.
- Article 14: By giving violators a free pass, the government penalized those who actually followed the law. That’s inequality, plain and simple.
- Judicial Pragmatism (Article 142): While the Court struck down future misuse, it allowed already-granted clearances to stand temporarily — showing it wasn’t out to create chaos, but restore balance.
- Environmental Law Anchors: From the Polluter Pays Principle to Precautionary Principle, the Court reaffirmed that these aren’t abstract ideals — they’re enforceable tools of justice.
This judgment wasn’t just a legal cleanup — it was a loud and clear reminder that sustainable development can’t be built on shortcuts, broken laws, or bureaucratic excuses.
Significance of the Verdict
Impact Area | What Changed | Significance |
1. Rule of Law Restored | Post-facto approvals declared illegal. | The Court revived core environmental principles like precaution, public trust, and inter-generational equity. Think of cases like Sterlite or Goa mining — now back under legal scrutiny. |
2. EIA Process Strengthened | Prior clearance is now non-negotiable. | This puts public hearings and local community consent back at the center of project approvals — not just rubber stamps. |
3. Govt Accountability Upheld | Centre was called out for shielding violators. | Regulatory bodies like the MoEF&CC can’t act like industry lobbyists anymore. Constitutional duties under Articles 48A & 51A(g) must be followed. |
4. Real Impact on Key Sectors | Mining, cement, steel & real estate lose the post-facto shield. | Over 100 shady projects (coal, iron ore etc.) now face real scrutiny. No more amnesties for environmental violations. |
5. Health & Justice Spotlighted | Right to clean air & water tied to Article 21. | 1.6 million pollution-linked deaths (Lancet, 2019) can’t be ignored. This is as much about people’s rights as it is about forests and rivers. |
6. Growth Redefined | Verdict supports green over greedy. | With 5.7% of GDP lost to environmental damage (World Bank), this ruling pushes for sustainable economic planning instead of short-term loot. |
7. Boost to Global Credibility | Aligns India with SDGs, Rio, and Paris targets. | From EPI’s worst rank (180/180) to climate leadership — this ruling helps repair India’s environmental image on global platforms. |
8. People + Judiciary = Change | Civil society warnings echoed in Court. | Groups like CSE and Parliamentary panels had flagged this long ago. The ruling shows what’s possible when watchdogs and the bench work together. |
Institutional and Systemic Challenges in Implementing the Supreme Court Ruling//MAINS
- Regulatory Capacity Deficits
Pollution Control Boards (PCBs) suffer from chronic under-resourcing, limited autonomy, and susceptibility to regulatory capture. The CAG (2022) found that nearly 40% of Environmental Clearance (EC) conditions were inadequately monitored. - Institutional Fragmentation
Overlapping mandates between the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC), National Green Tribunal (NGT), and State Pollution Control Boards (SPCBs) create operational ambiguities, as illustrated by the response failures in the Vizag LG Polymers gas leak case. - Inadequate Sanctioning Mechanisms
The Environment Protection Act, 1986 provides weak deterrents—maximum penalties often capped at ₹1 lakh—rendering enforcement ineffective. Between 2017–2021, more than 55 industrial projects were regularized without due environmental diligence. - Erosion of Participatory Governance
Mechanisms like public consultations—integral to Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs)—are frequently bypassed or tokenized, particularly in ecologically sensitive and tribal areas. The draft EIA 2020 proposed extensive exemptions, undermining procedural fairness. - Transparency and Data Gaps
Lack of real-time, publicly accessible environmental monitoring data hinders accountability and weakens both civil society oversight and institutional response systems. - Policy Conflict: Economic Growth vs Environmental Safeguards
The prioritization of “Ease of Doing Business” has often resulted in the dilution of environmental norms, with the draft EIA 2020 perceived as promoting extractive industrialism at the cost of ecological sustainability. - Federal Asymmetry and Norm Evasion
State governments, citing developmental prerogatives, have at times circumvented central environmental norms—as seen in infrastructure and mining approvals in Andhra Pradesh and Odisha—posing challenges to regulatory uniformity. - Judicial and Administrative Delay
Environmental litigation is characterized by procedural lags, reducing the efficacy of redress mechanisms. NGT rulings, such as in the Bellandur Lake pollution case, face prolonged enforcement timelines, undermining legal deterrence.
Role of Judiciary in Shaping India’s Environmental Jurisprudence
In India, the judiciary has emerged as a vital guardian of the environment, often stepping in where executive agencies falter. Through its interpretations of the Constitution, especially Article 21 (Right to Life), the Supreme Court and High Courts have expanded the scope of environmental protection, introducing doctrines like the “Polluter Pays Principle,” the “Precautionary Principle,” and “Public Trust Doctrine.” These interventions have helped create a robust framework of environmental jurisprudence, even in the absence of stringent legislative mechanisms. Here’s how the judiciary has played a transformative role:
Judicial Role | Explanation | Landmark Examples |
Expanding Right to Life (Article 21) | Interpreted ‘life’ to include clean air, safe water, and ecological balance. | Subhash Kumar v. State of Bihar (1991); M.C. Mehta v. Union of India (1987) |
Polluter Pays Principle | Makes polluters financially liable for the damage they cause to the environment. | Indian Council for Enviro-Legal Action v. Union of India (1996) |
Precautionary Principle | Prevents irreversible environmental harm even in cases of scientific uncertainty. | Vellore Citizens Welfare Forum v. Union of India (1996) |
Public Trust Doctrine | Treats natural resources as collective property under state stewardship. | M.C. Mehta v. Kamal Nath (1997) |
Enforcement through PILs | Citizens and NGOs can approach courts directly for environmental justice. | Rural Litigation and Entitlement Kendra v. State of UP (1985) |
Institutional/Policy Impact | Judicial orders led to new institutions like the National Green Tribunal (NGT) and schemes like Ganga Action Plan revamp. | Constitution of NGT (2010) post M.C. Mehta cases; SC push for Namami Gange |
Striking Down Executive Overreach | Reined in arbitrary government orders that diluted environmental norms. | SC Verdict on Post-Facto Clearances (2025); T.N. Godavarman case (Forest Bench) |
The Indian judiciary has not only upheld but enriched environmental governance by interpreting constitutional rights dynamically and stepping in as an institutional watchdog. From cleaning rivers to regulating polluting industries, courts have played an indispensable role. Yet, as judicial activism fills governance gaps, it also raises questions about institutional overreach and the need for stronger executive enforcement mechanisms.
Environmental Clearances in India: A Mixed Report Card
Environmental Clearance (EC) was institutionalized through the EIA Notification, 1994, and later strengthened in 2006. While the system was created to ensure that development does not come at the cost of ecology, its implementation in India reveals a complex picture—marked by achievements, serious shortcomings, and institutional contradictions.
Achievements
- Legal Framework and Institutional Structure in Place
India has a codified, layered EC process: Screening → Scoping → Public Consultation → Appraisal.
Example: The Coastal Road Project in Mumbai was stopped mid-way until CRZ (Coastal Regulation Zone) clearance was obtained, showing procedural enforcement. - Empowerment of Civil Society
The mandatory public consultation stage allows civil society and local communities to register their objections.
Example: In Vedanta’s Niyamgiri Bauxite mining case, the tribal community’s opposition led to the cancellation of EC—one of the strongest examples of public participation shaping outcomes. - Digital Initiatives like PARIVESH Portal
Launched by MoEF&CC, it enables online submission, monitoring, and clearance tracking, improving transparency.
Example: Real-time status updates for developers and public under the Single Window System. - Judicial Oversight
Courts have intervened to check misuse of EC.
Example: In Alembic Pharmaceuticals (2020) and Common Cause (2017), the Supreme Court ruled that post-facto clearances are illegal.
Shortcomings
- Rampant Use of Post-Facto Clearances
Projects started illegally and were later regularized, violating the very essence of EC.
Example: Over 100 mining and industrial projects were retrospectively approved between 2017 and 2021, including polluting mines in Jharkhand and Odisha. - Weak Enforcement and Monitoring
Even when ECs are granted, compliance with conditions is poorly tracked.
Example: CAG Report (2022) found that 40% of projects were not monitored post-clearance. - Erosion of Public Consultation
Public hearings are often rushed, poorly advertised, or bypassed in “strategic” projects.
Example: The EIA 2020 Draft attempted to dilute public hearings for many categories, leading to massive protests and expert criticism. - Conflict Between Growth and Ecology
The EC process is often subordinated to “ease of doing business” goals.
Example: The Char Dham Highway project in Uttarakhand bypassed several environmental concerns in the name of national security, despite clear evidence of ecological fragility. - Institutional Capture and Conflict of Interest
Expert Appraisal Committees (EACs) are often accused of being too lenient or industry-friendly.
Example: A study by CPR (Centre for Policy Research) showed that 90% of all projects seeking clearance between 2014–2019 were approved.
Mixed/Contextual Realities
- State-Centre Friction
Environmental norms are often diluted at the state level for political or economic reasons.
Example: Several states bypass central regulations using state-level environment impact authorities, especially for small-scale mining. - Ecological vs. Livelihood Dilemmas
In ecologically sensitive zones, people’s immediate economic needs sometimes conflict with long-term sustainability.
Example: Brick kilns in Bihar and stone crushers in Himachal Pradesh provide local employment but worsen air quality.
Way Forward
- Codify a Strong EIA Law
Finalize a clear, participatory EIA law that mandates early community input and bans post-facto clearances. Learn from Canada’s Impact Assessment Act, where public voice is part of project design. - Fix Pollution Control Boards
Grant independence, hire real experts (ecologists, health economists), and boost funding. ₹900 crore isn’t enough for enforcement in a country this size. - Track in Real Time
Make CEMS and satellite tools mandatory to monitor emissions and land use. Use platforms like PARIVESH and upcoming tools like NASA-ISRO’s NISAR to catch violations early. - Put People First
Make public hearings legally binding, held in local languages, and allow mobile-based complaints. This follows the spirit of the Aarhus Convention on public access and rights. - Make Polluters Pay
Amend the Environment Act to impose high fines and jail time for repeat offenders. UK-style liability laws force polluters to restore what they damage. - Green the Judiciary
Create fast-track environmental courts and train judges in ecological law. This will speed up stalled cases like the Bellandur Lake pollution mess. - Link Budget to Green Action
Tie budget allocations to environmental performance. Encourage green investments using bonds and tax breaks like the EU’s Green Deal playbook. - Follow Global Best Practices
Align with UNEP’s Rule of Law framework and draw lessons from US EPA and NEPA for stricter checks and rapid clean-up of damage.
#BACK2BASICS: Environmental Clearance (EC)//PRELIMS
Environmental Clearance (EC) is the official go-ahead from the Government—specifically the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC)—that a proposed project is environmentally safe to begin. It ensures that industrial, infrastructure, or mining activities do not harm the environment or local communities before they even start.
In simpler terms, you can’t build a factory, dam, mine, or highway until you’ve proved that the project won’t damage forests, pollute rivers, displace people unfairly, or disturb fragile ecosystems.
Why is it Needed?
Projects like thermal power plants, cement factories, mining operations, highways, and airports can have massive environmental and social impacts. EC acts like a green gatekeeper, ensuring:
- Sustainability in development
- Legal compliance with India’s environmental laws
- Protection of local communities, especially tribal, rural, and ecologically vulnerable groups
Legal Backbone: EIA Notification, 2006
The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification of 2006 (under the Environment Protection Act, 1986) governs the entire EC process. It breaks down the clearance into a structured four-stage process, making it scientific, participatory, and rule-based.
The 4-Stage EC Process:
Stage | What Happens | Why It Matters |
1. Screening | Determines if the project needs detailed environmental scrutiny (based on size, type, and location). | Filters out minor/harmless projects from full EIA. |
2. Scoping | Expert Appraisal Committee (EAC) sets the terms of reference for environmental studies. | Ensures the EIA study focuses on real, project-specific risks (e.g., groundwater, deforestation). |
3. Public Consultation | Local people and civil society groups give feedback, concerns, or objections in public hearings. | Builds trust, improves transparency, and empowers communities. |
4. Appraisal | Based on the EIA report and public feedback, the EAC makes a recommendation to grant or reject clearance. | Final gatekeeping: ensures all voices and data are considered. |