Tag: environmental jurisprudence

Supreme Court Approves New Definition of Aravali Range, Bans New Mining Pending Study
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Approves New Definition of Aravali Range, Bans New Mining Pending Study

The Supreme Court, while accepting a committee's operational definition of the Aravali Hills and Ranges for mining regulation, directed the preparation of a Management Plan for Sustainable Mining. This plan must identify conservation zones and permissible mining areas based on ecological carrying capacity. The Court ordered that no new mining leases be granted until this scientific study is finalized, balancing environmental protection with regulated mining activities. Facts Of The Case: The case originated from issues raised in the long-standing writ petition, T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of India, concerning the conservation of forests. A specific question arose before the Supreme Court in January 2024 regarding whether certain mining activities in Rajasthan fell within the leg...
Supreme Court Allows Ex-Post Facto Environmental Clearance: A Major Shift in Environmental Law
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Allows Ex-Post Facto Environmental Clearance: A Major Shift in Environmental Law

The Supreme Court, in a review petition, reversed its earlier judgment by allowing the recall of the ban on ex-post facto environmental clearances. The Court ruled that the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 does not absolutely prohibit such clearances and that they may be granted in exceptional cases after applying the principle of proportionality and the polluter pays principle. The bench emphasized that a balanced approach, weighing ecological damage against economic and public interest, must be adopted. Facts Of The Case: The case originates from legal challenges to a 2017 notification and a 2021 office memorandum issued by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC). These instruments created a framework for granting ex-post facto Environmental Clearance (EC...
Supreme Court Directs Statutory Protection for Delhi Ridge to Curb Encroachments
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Directs Statutory Protection for Delhi Ridge to Curb Encroachments

This Supreme Court judgment directs statutory reconstitution of the Delhi Ridge Management Board under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, to function as a single-window authority. It mandates the Board to ensure the protection, removal of encroachments, and ecological restoration of both the notified Ridge and the Morphological Ridge, with oversight by the Central Empowered Committee and the Supreme Court. Facts Of The Case: The case concerns the long-standing litigation over the protection and management of the Delhi Ridge, a vital ecological area within the National Capital Territory. The primary legal proceedings originate from Writ Petition (C) No. 202 of 1995 (T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of India) and connected matters. The Supreme Court was tasked with adjudicat...
Supreme Court Modifies Order: Pre-1996 Encroachments on Forest Land Spared from Eviction
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Modifies Order: Pre-1996 Encroachments on Forest Land Spared from Eviction

The Supreme Court modified its earlier order concerning forest land regularization. It declined to exempt small fragmented land parcels from being declared as protected forest but clarified the state could utilize them for purposes under Section 3(2) of the Forest Rights Act, 2006, following due procedure. The Court also allowed a one-time exemption for pre-December 1996 encroachments on specified categories of land, as recommended by the Central Empowered Committee. Facts Of The Case: The case originates from the landmark Godavarman Thirumulpad vs. Union of India case (W.P.(C) No.202 of 1995), which deals extensively with forest conservation across India. Within this ongoing litigation, an Interim Application (I.A. No.12465/2019) was filed concerning the classification and treatme...
Supreme Court Upholds Strict Environmental Laws: Prior Clearance Must for Projects, No Retrospective Approvals
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Upholds Strict Environmental Laws: Prior Clearance Must for Projects, No Retrospective Approvals

The Supreme Court ruled that ex post facto environmental clearances (ECs) violate environmental jurisprudence and are alien to the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, and the EIA Notification, 2006. Stressing the precautionary principle and Article 21 (right to a pollution-free environment), the Court struck down the 2017 notification and 2021 OM permitting retrospective ECs, holding them arbitrary and illegal. It reiterated that prior EC is mandatory, and no regularization of violations is permissible, aligning with its earlier judgments in Common Cause and Alembic Pharmaceuticals. The Court barred future exemptions but spared already granted ECs. Facts Of The Case: The case involved multiple writ petitions and a civil appeal challenging the legality of the 2017 notification and 2021 ...