SC Verdict on Environment: Can India Permit Post-Facto Pollution?

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

Background of the Case

  • On 18 November 2025, the Supreme Court (2:1 majority) reviewed and recalled its May 2025 judgment in CREDAI vs Vanashakti.
  • The recalled judgment had earlier declared ex post facto environmental clearances (ECs) illegal.
  • The review now holds that retrospective ECs may sometimes serve public interest, with Justice Ujjal Bhuyan dissenting.

The Problematic Logic of the Review

  • The Court argues that refusing retrospective ECs could force authorities to halt or demolish completed projects.
  • This creates circular reasoning: the illegal act becomes the justification for granting the clearance.
  • Violations thus become grounds for validation, making rules fungible in face of a fait accompli.

Context of India’s Environmental Jurisprudence

  • For decades, SC has linked the right to a healthy environment to Article 21.
  • It has repeatedly upheld the precautionary principle, sustainable development, intergenerational equity, and the right against climate harms.
  • However, these doctrines are undermined when the Court undercuts its own reasoned rulings.

The Original Judgment (May 2025)

  • Authored by Justice A.S. Oka, it struck down the 2017 Notification and 2021 Office Memorandum permitting retrospective ECs.
  • It reaffirmed that prior EC is a core pillar of the EIA 2006 regime, requiring:
    • public hearings,
    • scientific impact studies,
    • expert appraisal, and
    • conditional approvals before project initiation.
  • Retrospective ECs violate the purpose of preventive environmental regulation.
  • Relied on Common Cause (2017) and M.C. Mehta decisions, which rejected backdated approvals.
  • Highlighted that the Government had earlier assured the Madras High Court that the 2017 notification was a one-time exemption, later contradicted by the 2021 SOP.

Flaws in the Review Judgment

  • Focuses narrowly on project inconvenience, shifting from principle to expediency.
  • As Justice Bhuyan warns, replacing prior scrutiny with backdated lenience destroys deterrence.
  • Encourages project proponents to begin work without EC, expecting later regularisation through fines.

Consequences for Environmental Governance

  • EIA process hollowed out; public participation and expert review reduced to ritual.
  • Compliance becomes voluntary; enforcement loses strength.
  • Signals dilution of accountability at a time of deepening climate crises.

Conclusion

  • The review weakens decades of environmental protection jurisprudence.
  • When the Court reconsiders the issue, more than EC notifications are at stake—the credibility of India’s rule of law is on the line.

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