๐Ÿ“ฐ Today's Current AffairsRead Now →
📷 Follow on Instagram

Pollution Control Laws & Bodies




โš–๏ธ Chapter 05 ยท Topic 05 ยท Environmental Pollution

Pollution Control Laws & Bodies in India

EPA 1986, Water Act 1974, Air Act 1981, CPCB, SPCB, NGT, EIA, environmental principles โ€” complete UPSC & PSC notes.

โš–๏ธ Key Pollution Control Laws โ€” Timeline

LawYearKey Provisions
Water (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act1974Prevents water pollution; establishes CPCB and SPCBs; sets water quality standards; consent mechanism for industries
Air (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act1981Prevents air pollution; sets ambient air quality standards; extends CPCB’s mandate to air; consent for industries
Environment Protection Act (EPA)1986Umbrella legislation; enacted after Bhopal; empowers central govt; EIA; hazardous waste; CRZ; noise standards
National Green Tribunal Act2010Establishes NGT; fast-track environmental justice; original jurisdiction; compensation for environmental damage

โš–๏ธ Environment Protection Act 1986 โ€” In Detail

  • Enacted in response to Bhopal Gas Tragedy (December 1984) โ€” MIC gas leak from Union Carbide plant; 3,000+ deaths
  • Umbrella legislation โ€” fills gaps in existing laws; empowers central government to take all necessary measures
  • Enacted under Article 253 of the Constitution (implementing Stockholm Conference decisions)
  • Key powers under EPA:
    • Set environmental quality standards
    • Restrict industrial activities in certain areas
    • Order closure of polluting industries
    • Regulate hazardous substances
    • Issue EIA notifications
    • Declare Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs)
  • Rules issued under EPA: EIA Notification 2006, Hazardous Waste Rules, E-Waste Rules, Plastic Waste Rules, Noise Pollution Rules, CRZ Notification

โš–๏ธ CPCB & SPCBs

BodyEstablishedUnderRole
CPCB (Central Pollution Control Board)1974Water Act 1974National body; sets standards; monitors pollution; advises central govt; coordinates with SPCBs; HQ: New Delhi
SPCBs (State Pollution Control Boards)1974 onwardsWater Act 1974State-level implementation; issues consents to industries; monitors compliance; enforces standards
PCCs (Pollution Control Committees)โ€”โ€”For Union Territories without legislature (e.g., Delhi has DPCC)
๐Ÿ“Œ Consent Mechanism: Industries must obtain “Consent to Establish” and “Consent to Operate” from SPCBs under the Water Act and Air Act. This is the primary regulatory tool for pollution control. Industries are classified as Red (highly polluting), Orange, Green, and White based on pollution potential.

โš–๏ธ National Green Tribunal (NGT)

  • Established under NGT Act 2010
  • India was the 3rd country to establish a specialised environmental tribunal (after Australia and New Zealand)
  • Original jurisdiction โ€” can hear cases directly (not just appeals)
  • Appellate jurisdiction โ€” appeals against orders of environmental authorities
  • Can award compensation for environmental damage and personal injury
  • Cases must be filed within 6 months of cause of action
  • NGT has taken suo motu cognisance of environmental issues
  • Benches: New Delhi (Principal), Bhopal, Pune, Kolkata, Chennai
  • NGT applies the Precautionary Principle and Polluter Pays Principle

โš–๏ธ Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)

  • EIA = systematic process to evaluate the environmental consequences of a proposed project before it is approved
  • Mandatory under EIA Notification 2006 (issued under EPA 1986)
  • Projects are classified into Category A (national level, MoEFCC approval) and Category B (state level, SEIAA approval)
  • EIA Process: Screening โ†’ Scoping โ†’ Baseline data collection โ†’ Impact prediction โ†’ Mitigation measures โ†’ Public hearing โ†’ Expert appraisal โ†’ Environmental clearance
  • Public hearing โ€” mandatory for Category A and most Category B projects; local communities can raise objections
  • Environmental Clearance (EC) โ€” approval given after EIA; conditions attached
  • EIA Notification 2020 (draft) โ€” proposed to weaken EIA; withdrawn after protests

โš–๏ธ Key Environmental Principles

PrincipleMeaningSource
Polluter Pays PrincipleThe party responsible for pollution must bear the cost of cleanup and compensationRio Declaration (1992); Vellore Citizens case (1996)
Precautionary PrincipleWhen there is scientific uncertainty about potential harm, precautionary measures should be taken; burden of proof on the developerRio Declaration; Vellore Citizens case (1996)
Sustainable DevelopmentDevelopment that meets present needs without compromising future generations’ ability to meet their needsBrundtland Commission (1987)
Public Trust DoctrineNatural resources (air, water, forests) are held in trust by the state for the public; cannot be privatisedM.C. Mehta vs Kamal Nath (1997)
Absolute LiabilityEnterprises engaged in hazardous activities are absolutely liable for harm caused, without exceptionsM.C. Mehta vs UOI (Oleum Gas case, 1987)

โœ… Revision Checklist โ€” Pollution Control Laws

โœ… Water Act 1974 = establishes CPCB + SPCBs = water quality standards
โœ… Air Act 1981 = extends CPCB mandate to air = ambient air quality standards
โœ… EPA 1986 = umbrella legislation = after Bhopal = Article 253 = empowers central govt
โœ… NGT Act 2010 = India 3rd country with specialised environmental tribunal
โœ… NGT = original + appellate jurisdiction = compensation = 6-month filing limit
โœ… NGT benches = Delhi (principal) + Bhopal + Pune + Kolkata + Chennai
โœ… CPCB = 1974 = Water Act = national body = HQ New Delhi
โœ… EIA = Environmental Impact Assessment = EIA Notification 2006 = under EPA 1986
โœ… EIA categories = A (national, MoEFCC) + B (state, SEIAA)
โœ… Public hearing = mandatory for EIA = local communities can object
โœ… Polluter Pays Principle = polluter bears cleanup cost = Vellore Citizens case 1996
โœ… Precautionary Principle = uncertainty โ†’ precaution = burden on developer
โœ… Absolute Liability = M.C. Mehta 1987 = no exceptions for hazardous industries
โœ… Public Trust Doctrine = M.C. Mehta vs Kamal Nath 1997 = natural resources held in trust
โœ… Industry consent = Red/Orange/Green/White classification by pollution potential