Judicial Environmental Governance and Regulatory Uncertainty

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

 

Shift in Supreme Court’s Role

  • Over the past decade, the Supreme Court has moved beyond legality review to forward-looking regulation.
  • This shift emerged as regulators failed, drawing the Court into a managerial and supervisory role.
  • Instead of correcting regulatory processes, the Court often substituted itself for regulators.
  • Prolonged involvement through continuing mandamus has created uncertainty for all stakeholders.

Key Judicial Interventions and Revisions

  • Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZ):

    • June 2022 order mandated minimum one-kilometre ESZ around protected areas.
    • April 2023 modification exempted areas with existing notifications due to implementation difficulties.
  • Diesel and Petrol Vehicles:
    • December 2015 ban on diesel vehicles above 2,000 cc in Delhi-NCR.
    • August 2016 relaxation with a compensatory charge.
    • In 2025, protection for older vehicles narrowed to those below Bharat Stage-IV.
  • Firecrackers:
    • Near-total bans imposed due to air pollution, later relaxed for festivals and “green crackers”.
  • These shifts show the Court beginning with broad prohibitions, then narrowing them citing enforcement realities.

Doctrine versus Consequences

  • In May 2025 (Vanashakti case), the Court held ex post facto clearances violated environmental principles.
  • By November 2025, this position was recalled, citing disruption to ongoing economic activity.
  • Doctrinal clarity often became secondary to managing economic and social fallout.

Role and Limits of Expertise

  • Expert committees have guided decisions, such as defining Aravalli hills for mining control.
  • Subsequent concerns led to orders being kept in abeyance and new committees constituted.
  • Uniform rules, like ESZ buffers, ignored ecological and geographical diversity, inviting resistance.
  • The Court’s fluctuating reliance on expertise has resulted in policy U-turns.

Impact on Public Participation

  • Early judicial approvals force project proponents to approach the Court prematurely.
  • This creates a false sense of finality, discouraging later statutory and public challenges.
  • Judicial entry reshapes who is heard and what evidence matters.

Need for Stability and Course Correction

  • Frequent interim orders correct direction but undermine regulatory certainty.
  • The Court should discipline regulators through time-bound actions, transparency, and public data.
  • Avoiding sweeping rules and clarifying modification thresholds can reduce uncertainty.
  • A steadier approach would ensure clear rules, accountable governance, and meaningful public contestation.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top