Post-Facto Environmental Clearance Debate

Syllabus: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment.

Context

  • A Supreme Court Bench reversed its May 2025 order that halted post-facto environmental clearances (ECs).
  • Case concerns the legality of post-facto ECs under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, and EIA notifications of 1994 and 2006.

Legal Framework

  • The EC framework is built on prior (ex-ante) clearance, requiring assessment before project initiation.
  • Earlier judgments—Common Cause (2017) and Alembic Pharmaceuticals (2020)—ruled that post-facto ECs are not permissible where prior EC is mandatory.
  • In Vanashakti (May 2025), the Court interpreted these rulings as prohibiting post-facto ECs entirely.

Majority View in New Order

  • Majority does not discard the “EC first” principle.
  • It identifies a narrow window for post-facto regularisation when substantial investment already exists.
  • Such clearances remain exceptional and remedial, accompanied by penalties or mitigation orders.
  • Court questioned the discriminatory treatment: older post-facto ECs were upheld while future ones were barred.

Concerns

  • Post-facto ECs weaken the preventive purpose of EIAs because impacts are assessed after irreversible changes.
  • These approvals cannot replace ex-ante scrutiny; they only impose penalties, closures, or demolitions.
  • Frequent regularisation risks legitimising violations and undermining environmental jurisprudence.

Implications

  • Court reopened the legal question, enabling limited regularisation but reaffirming ex-ante clearance as the default.
  • Ministry must treat post-facto ECs as rare exceptions, consistent with statutory intent.
  • Issues of unequal treatment should be resolved by tightening legacy approvals, not reviving permissive regimes.

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