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LEAD
Law
Environment and
Development
Journal
VOLUME
4/1
GREEN COURTS IN INDIA: STRENGTHENING ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE?
Raghav Sharma
STUDENT NOTE
LEAD Journal (Law, Environment and Development Journal)
is a peer-reviewed academic publication based in New Delhi and London and jointly managed by the
School of Law, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) - University of London
and the International Environmental Law Research Centre (IELRC).
LEAD is published at www.lead-journal.org
ISSN 1746-5893
The Managing Editor, LEAD Journal, c/o International Environmental Law Research Centre (IELRC), International Environment
House II, 1F, 7 Chemin de Balexert, 1219 Châtelaine-Geneva, Switzerland, Tel/fax: + 41 (0)22 79 72 623, info@lead-journal.org
This document can be cited as
Raghav Sharma, ‘Green Courts in India: Strengthening Environmental Governance?’,
4/1 Law, Environment and Development Journal (2008), p. 50,
available at http://www.lead-journal.org/content/08050.pdf.
Raghav Sharma, 4th year Student, National Law University, Jodhpur, Rajasthan
Email: raghavsharma1986@gmail.com
Published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 License
STUDENT NOTE
GREEN COURTS IN INDIA: STRENGTHENING
ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE?
Raghav Sharma
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. Introduction 52
2. India’s Green Constitution: From ‘Enviromyopicity’ to ‘Envirosensitivity’ 52
3. ‘Green’ Courts: Theoretical Justifications and Practical Necessity 57
4. An Overview of Environmental Courts in Other Jurisdictions 61
4.1 The Land and Environment Court, Australia 61
4.2 The New Zealand Environment Court 62
5. An Overview of Law Commission of India’s Recommendations 63
5.1 The Composition of ‘Green’ Courts 63
5.2 Jurisdiction and Powers of ‘Green’ Courts 64
5.3 Locus Standi and Procedural Issues 65
6 The Dark Side of Law Commission of India’s Recommendations 65
6.1 Executive Interference in Functioning of ‘Green’ Courts 66
6.2 Why Create Toothless Institutions? 69
7 Conclusion 71
1
INTRODUCTION
The Indian judiciary is set to turn ‘green’ with the
Law Commission of India (hereafter ‘LCI’)
recommending, in its 186th Report, the constitution
of specialised Environmental Courts to strengthen
and revitalise environmental governance.1 The
proposal has its roots in the call that emanated from
the corridors of the apex Constitutional Court, that
is, the Supreme Court of India, in numerous
significant cases.2 The Law Ministry has formulated
the required draft legislation which awaits legislative
sanction.3 The Supreme Court has elevated the ‘right
to healthy environment’ to the status of a
fundamental human right under Article 214 of the
Constitution in the process of progressive enrichment
of the environmental jurisprudence with principles
like sustainable development, polluter pays, public
trust doctrine, precautionary principle and
intergenerational equity. This extension of
constitutional umbrella over environmental issues
through dynamic judicial activism has augured well
for environmental governance in India. The
constitution of a ‘green’ branch of judiciary to
adjudicate environmental matters will be a further
significant step towards improving the quality of
environment at a time when India has been caught
in a tussle between developmental and sustainability
issues. Improvement in institutional arrangements to
provide easily accessible environmental justice to
people is a part of the international agenda
highlighted in instruments like Rio Declaration on
Environment and Development, 1992 and the
Aarhus Convention, 1998. Such institutional changes
carry a greater significance in case of emerging market
economies like India where trade and development
issues are set to clash with environmental imperatives.
Keeping the development of environmental
jurisprudence in India as the background, this article
highlights the problems afflicting the Indian judicial
system which have led to a call for a specialised
judiciary. I propose to showcase the LCI’s significant
recommendations regarding various dimensions of
the ‘green’ court project in light of the international
experience concerning such courts in Australia and
New Zealand. In light of this appraisal, I argue that
the Law Commission Report (hereafter ‘186th LCR’),
though exhaustive and comprehensive on familiar
dimensions of the issue, fails to comprehend and
explore the relatively obscure anomalies that plague
the idea of having Environmental Courts in the
recommended form - a lacuna which renders the
proposed institutional arrangements myopic and status
quoist. This article highlights that the constitution of a
new court system may not be such a ‘green’ plan after all,
unless it is made capable of adjudicating in an atmosphere
independent of dominating political interests plaguing
such specialised courts and thus, as an alternative, it
advocates for the establishment of specialist divisions
within the existing Indian High Courts.
2
INDIA’S GREEN CONSTITUTION:
FROM ‘ENVIROMYOPICITY’ TO
‘ENVIROSENSITIVITY’
Environment related rights were conspicuously
absent from the original version of the Constitution
of India, which was prominently dominated by
Law, Environment and Development Journal
52
1 Law Commission of India, ‘186th Report on Proposal to
Constitute Environment Courts’, September 2003,
available at http://lawcommissionofindia.nic.in/reports/
186th%20report.pdf and Dewan Vohra, ‘Special ‘Green’
Courts Set up to Rule over Environmental Disputes’,
Financial Express, 2 June 2007.
2M.C. Mehta v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 17 February 1986, (1986) 2 SCC 176, 201-
202, Indian Council for Enviro Legal Action v Union of
India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 13 February
1996, (1996) 3 SCC 212, 252, A.P. Pollution Control Board
v Prof. M.V. Nayadu (Retd.) & Ors, Supreme Court of
India, Judgement of 27 January 1999, (1999) 2 SCC
718,730-731[hereafter A.P. Pollution Control Board I case]
and A.P. Pollution Control Board v Prof. M.V. Nayudu
(Retd.) & Ors., Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 1
December 2000, (2001) 2 SCC 62, 84-85 [hereafter A.P.
Pollution Control Board II case].
3 Kalpana Sharma, ‘Who will benefit from ‘green’ courts?’,
The Hindu, 23 March 2007.
4 Article 21 reads as: Protection of life and personal
liberty -No person shall be deprived of his life or personal
liberty except according to procedure established by law.
business and property rights. Consequently,
environmental jurisprudence was also an unknown
appellation for the Indian judiciary. The 42nd
constitutional amendment, made in 1976, changed
this landscape by inducting Article 48-A5 and Article
51A (g)6 into this ‘enviromyopic’ document.
Simultaneously, the Supreme Court of India
embarked on a ‘creative’ activist phase of
constitutional interpretation in the aftermath of the
fiasco in A.D.M. Jabalpur v Shivakant Shukla 7 where
it found itself helpless in defending the basic civil
liberties of the citizens against executive excesses.8
Starting from early 1980s, the Court has developed a
body of ‘green constitutional law’ to safeguard the
citizens’ health from the deleterious affects of
environmental degradation. In M.C. Mehta v Union
of India9 (Oleum Gas Leakage case), the Supreme
Court propounded the standard of ‘absolute liability’
for payment of compensation to those affected by
the accident in case of industries engaged in hazardous
or inherently dangerous activities as opposed to the
prevalent notion of ‘strict liability’ under the Rylands
v. Fletcher10 standard. The Court has adopted an
expanded view of ‘life’ under Article 21 and enriched
it to include environmental rights by reading it along
with Articles 4711, 48-A and 51A(g) and declaring:
Article 21 protects right to life as a
fundamental right. Enjoyment of life
and its attainment including their right
to life with human dignity
encompasses within its ambit, the
protection and preservation of
environment, ecological balance free
from pollution of air and water,
sanitation without which life cannot
be enjoyed. Any contra acts or actions
would cause environmental,
ecological, air, water, pollution, etc.
should be regarded as amounting to
violation of Article 21.12
By 1990s, it categorically declared that ‘issues of
environment must and shall receive the highest
attention from this court’.13 India’s ‘Green
Constitution’ now guarantees a right to healthy
environment,14 right to clean air,15 right to clean
water,16 enjoins the State and its agencies to strictly
enforce environmental laws17 while disclosing
Green Courts in India
53
5 Article 48-A reads as: Protection and improvement of
environment and safeguarding of forests and wild life-
The State shall endeavour to protect and improve the
environment and to safeguard the forests and wild life of
the country.
6 Article 51A(g) reads as: Fundamental Duties- It shall be
the duty of every citizen of India- (g) to protect and
improve the natural environment including forests, lakes,
rivers and wild life, and to have compassion for living
creatures.
7 Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 28 April 1976,
(1976) 2 SCC 521.
8 S.P. Sathe, ‘Judicial Activism: The Indian Experience’, 6
Wash. U. J.L. & Pol’y 29, 40 (2001).
9 Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 20 December
1986, (1987) 1 SCC 395.
10 Court of Exchequer Chamber, Judgement of 14 May
1866, (1865-66) L.R. 1 Ex. 26.
11 Article 47 reads as: Duty of the State to raise the level
of nutrition and the standard of living and to improve
public health- The State shall regard the raising of the
level of nutrition and the standard of living of its people
and the improvement of public health as among its
primary duties and, in particular, the State shall
endeavour to bring about prohibition of the consumption
except for medicinal purposes of intoxicating drinks and
of drugs which are injurious to health.
12 Virender Gaur & Ors. v State of Haryana & Ors., Supreme
Court of India, Judgement of 24 November 1994, (1995)
2 SCC 577 [hereafter Virender Gaur’s case].
13 Tarun Bharat Sangh, Alwar v Union of India, Supreme
Court of India, Judgement of 11 October 1991, 1992 Supp
(2) SCC 448.
14 Subhash Kumar v State of Bihar, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 9 January 1991, (1991) 1 SCC 598, 604
[hereafter Subhash Kumar’s case]; M.C. Mehta v Union of
India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 15 May 1992,
(1992) 3 SCC 256, 257 and Virender Gaur’s case, note 12 above.
15 M.C. Mehta v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 12 May 1998, (1998) 6 SCC 60 & Judgement
of 18 November 1998, (1998) 9 SCC 589, M.C.Mehta v
Union of India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of
16 April 1999, (1999) 6 SCC 9 [matter regarding diesel
emissions] and Murli S. Deora v Union of India, Supreme
Court of India, Judgement of 2 November 2001, (2001)
8 SCC 765.
16 A.P. Pollution Control Board II case, note 2 above, at 82,
Mrs. Susetha v State of T.N. & Ors., Supreme Court of
India, Judgement of 8 August 2006, (2006) 6 SCC 543,
Narmada Bachao Andolan v Union of India, Supreme
Court of India, Judgement of 18 October 2000, (2000)
10 SCC 664[hereafter Narmada Bachao Andolan case] and
Subhash Kumar’s case, note 14 above.
17 Indian Council for Enviro Legal Action v Union of India,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 18 April 1996,
(1996) 5 SCC 281 [The Court took upon itself the duty
to intervene in all such cases] and N. D. Jayal v Union of
India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 1 September
2003, (2004) 9 SCC 362 [hereafter N. D. Jayal’s case].
information in respect of decisions which affect
health, life and livelihood18 and disallows
inadequacy of funds and resources as a pretext for
the evasion of obligations by the State.19 Significant
environmental principles like polluter pays,20
precautionary principle,21 sustainable
development,22 public trust doctrine23 and
intergenerational equity24 have become entrenched
in the Indian law without explicit incorporation in
any legislative framework. In Vellore Citizens’
Welfare Forum v Union of India & Ors.,25 the Court
employed the ‘precautionary principle’ to invent the
special principle of burden of proof in environmental
cases where burden as to ‘the absence of injurious
effect of the actions proposed, is placed on those who
want to change the status quo’ viz. polluter or the
industrialist. In the process, the apex Court has gone
beyond the statutory texts to refer extensively to
international conventions and obligations of India26
and even to the historical environmental values
reflected in the edicts of Emperor Ashoka27 and
verses of Atharva Veda.28 The Supreme Court has,
in clear terms, advised the State to shed its
‘extravagant unbridled sovereign power’ and to
pursue a policy to maintain ecological balance and
hygienic environment.29 The activist attitude ranges
across a gamut of environmental issues viz. banning
aquaculture industries in coastal areas to prevent
drinking water from becoming saline,30 issuing
directions for improving quality of air in the
National Capital Territory of Delhi31 and protecting
Taj Mahal,32 prohibiting cigarette smoking in public
places,33 addressing issues of solid waste
management34, proscribing construction activities
in the vicinity of lakes35 and directing the lower
courts to deal strictly with environmental offences.36
In respect of forest governance, the Supreme Court
has made an enormous contribution through the case
of T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of
India.37 The case was set in the backdrop of critical
state of national forest cover, appalling apathy of
governments towards forest management and
Law, Environment and Development Journal
54
18 Essar Oil Ltd. v Halar Utkarsh Samiti & Ors,. Supreme
Court of India, Judgement of 19 January 2004, (2004) 2
SCC 392.
19 Almitre H. Patel v Union of India, Supreme Court of
India, Judgement of 16 January 1998, (1998) 2 SCC 416
and B.L. Wadhera v Union of India, Supreme Court of
India, Judgement of 1 March 1996,(1996) 2 SCC 594.
20 M.C. Mehta v Kamal Nath, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 12 May 2000, (2000) 6 SCC 213.
21 Vellore Citizens’ Welfare Forum v Union of India, Supreme
Court of India, Judgement of 28 August 1996, (1996) 5
SCC 647.
22 Narmada Bachao Andolan case, note 16 above, Goa
Foundation v Diksha Holdings Pvt. Ltd., Supreme Court
of India, Judgement of 10 November 2000, (2001) 2 SCC
97 and N. D. Jayal’s case, note 17 above.
23 K.M. Chinnappa & T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v Union
of India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 30 October
2002, AIR 2003 SC 724 and Intellectuals Forum, Tirupathi
v State of A.P. and Ors., Supreme Court of India, Judgement
of 23 February 2006, (2006) 3 SCC 549.
24 State of Himachal Pradesh v Ganesh Wood Products,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 11 September
1995, (1995) 6 SCC 363.
25 Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 28 August 1996,
(1996) 5 SCC 647 and A.P. Pollution Control Board II
case, note 2 above.
26 K.M. Chinnappa & T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v
Union of India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of
30 October 2002, AIR 2003 SC 724.
27 State of Bihar v Murad Ali Khan, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 10 October 1998, (1988) 4 SCC 655.
28 Rural Litigation & Entitlement Kendra v State of UP,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 30 August 1988,
1989 Supp (1) SCC 504.
29 Virender Gaur’s case, note 12 above.
30 S. Jagannath v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 11 December 1996, (1997) 2 SCC 87.
31 M.C. Mehta v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 14 February 1996, (1998) 8 SCC 648
[Introduction of lead free petrol] and M.C. Mehta v Union
of India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 12
September 1998, (1998) 8 SCC 206 [Phasing out
commercial vehicles older than 15 years].
32 M.C. Mehta v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 10 May 1996, (1996) 8 SCC 462 [Taj
Trapezium Case].
33 Murli S. Deora v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 2 November 2001, (2001) 8 SCC 765.
34 Almitre H. Patel v Union of India and B.L. Wadhera v
Union of India, note 19 above.
35 M.C. Mehta v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 11 October 1998, (1997) 3 SCC 715 [matter
relating to Badkal and Surajkund Lakes].
36 U.P. Pollution Board v Mohan Meakins Ltd., Supreme Court
of India, Judgement of 27 March 2000, (2000) 3 SCC 745.
37 T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v Union of India & Ors,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 12 December
1996, (1997) 2 SCC 267 [The Court interpreted the word
‘forest’ under the Forest Conservation Act, 1980, to have
a dictionary meaning and thus, included all forests
irrespective of their notification as Reserved or Protected
forests under the Indian Forest Act, 1927. This has
brought all such tracts under the government approval
window in respect of non-forest purposes].
conservation and open violations of forest
legislations by illegal felling in North-Eastern
States.38 A three judge bench of the Court, known
as the ‘Green Bench’ or the ‘Forest Bench’, issued a
‘continuing mandamus’,39 operative for past twelve
years,40 and has been using it to deal with prominent
issues including conversion of forest land for non-
forest purposes,41 illegal felling,42 potentially
threatening mining operations,43 afforestation and
compensation by private user agencies for using
forest land.44 In pursuance of the orders, the
Government has constituted several High Powered
Committees, a Compensatory Afforestation
Management and Planning Authority and a Central
Empowered Committee.45 The enormous
significance of this single writ petition is evident
from the fact that about 2000 interlocutory
applications relating to forest issues have been
disposed under it.46
Of late, the apex Court has been confronted with
intricate cases requiring resolution of the tension
between the ‘right to development’ and the ‘right
to environment’.47 The anxiety to resolve this
tension and adopt a balanced approach is apparent
in N.D. Jayal v Union of India,48 a case involving
construction of a large dam at Tehri in Himalayan
foothills, where the Court refused to interfere by
emphatically declaring the symbiotic relation
between both these rights in the following words:
Right to environment is a
fundamental right. On the other
hand, right to development is also
one. Here the right to ‘sustainable
development’ cannot be singled out.
Therefore, the concept of ‘sustainable
development’ is to be treated as an
integral part of ‘life’ under Article 21.
Weighty concepts like
intergenerational equity, public trust
doctrine and precautionary principle,
which we declared as inseparable
ingredients of our environmental
jurisprudence, could only be nurtured
by ensuring sustainable development.
Green Courts in India
55
38 See Armin Rosencraz & Sharachchandra Lele, ‘Supreme
Court and India’s Forests’, Vol. XLIII, No.5, Economic
& Political Weekly 11, 12 (February 2-8, 2008).
39 Where the mere issue of a one-time mandamus would be
futile against a public agency guilty of continuous inertia
in failing to perform its public duties, then a continuing
mandamus can be issued by the court. Vineet Narain v
Union of India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of
18 December 1997, (1998) 1 SCC 226.
40 The orders of the Court are available at http://
www.forestcaseindia.org//f2/.
41 T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v Union of India & Ors,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 17 September
1998, AIR 1999 SC 2420 [hereafter Godavarman case].
42 The Godavarman case, note 41 above, Supreme Court
of India, Judgement of 12 December 1996, (1997) 2 SCC
267, Judgement of 15 January 1998, (1998) 2 SCC 59,
Judgement of 23 February 1998, (1998) 9 SCC 660,
Judgement of 10 December 1998, (1999) 9 SCC 151 and
M.C. Mehta v Union of India & Ors., Supreme Court of
India, Judgement of 18 March 2004, (2004) 12 SCC 118.
43 The Godavarman case, note 41 above, Supreme Court of
India, Judgement of 7 January 1998, (1998) 2 SCC 341,
Judgement of 15 April 1998, (1998) 6 SCC 190, Judgement
of 13 January 1998, (2000) 10 SCC 579, Judgement of 3
April 2000, (2002) 10 SCC 641, Judgement of 15 December
2006, (2006) 10 SCC 491 and K.M. Chinnappa & T.N.
Godavarman Thirumulpad v Union of India., Supreme Court
of India, Judgement of 30 October 2002, AIR 2003 SC 724.
44 The Godavarman case, note 41 above, Supreme Court of
India, Judgement of 26 September 2006, (2006) 1 SCC 1.
45 The Central Empowered Committee has been constituted
by the Government of India through a Gazette
Notification dated 17 September, 2002. Its functions
include monitoring the implementation of Court’s orders
and placing reports of non-compliance before the Court
in respect of encroachments, removals, working plans,
compensatory afforestation, plantations and other
conservation issues and to examine pending interlocutory
applications in the said Writ petitions.
46 See ‘SC forest panel has heard 2,000 cases till date’, The
Times of India, 20 March 2008 and See Armin Rosencraz
& Sharachchandra Lele, note 38 above [The authors have
criticised the Supreme Court for assuming ‘the roles of
policy maker, law maker and administrator’ by
progressively indulging into micromanagement of forest
issues which should have been done by the executive and
by centralising the forest management through widening
of the government approval window in respect of non-
forest uses and working plans for timber felling].
47 Narmada Bachao Andolan case, note 16 above, Goa
Foundation v Diksha Holdings Pvt. Ltd., Supreme Court
of India, Judgement of 10 November 2000, (2001) 2 SCC
97 [The case dealt with construction of a hotel in Goa
for a sea-beach resort] and M.C. Mehta v Union of India,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 5 April 2002,
(2002) 4 SCC 356.
48 Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 1 September 2003,
(2004) 9 SCC 362.
zone to maintain a ‘green area’ around the periphery
of a village.55 In the absence of any evidence, it
adjudged that these directions would have hindered
land acquisition for industrial development.
Justice P.N. Bhagawati once made a insightful
observation: ‘We need judges who are alive to the
socio-economic realities of Indian life’.56 This
statement explains the gradual shift in the judicial
approach while dealing with the issues of sustainable
development. These new cases have been set against
the backdrop of a radically different socio-economic
background of national life. The annual GDP
growth rate of the Indian economy has catapulted
to the levels of 8 to 9 per cent against a meager 5 to
6 per cent in the previous two decades57 and the
annual growth rate of the industrial sector has
skyrocketed from the range of 5 to 7 per cent to
11.6 per cent during the period of 2002 to 2007.58
Thus, industrial development has become a pressing
need in the current phase of economic
transformation. In such a scenario, it is impossible
for the higher judiciary to remain oblivious of this
critical facet of national life59 and therefore, there
is an increased probability of a pro-development bias
creeping into the judgments where courts are
required to review choices made between
environment and development.
However, a gamut of recent cases seemingly projects
an impression of Court’s growing pro-industry tilt
while dealing with intricate issues of sustainable
development. In Deepak Nitrite Ltd. v State of Gujarat
& Ors.,49 a case dealing with determination of
standard of compensation in respect of industries
which had flouted the norms laid down by the State
Pollution Control Board, the Court held that mere
non-compliance with these norms does not imply
that environmental damage would result thereby; a
strange and inexplicable conclusion indeed.50
Confronted with the issue of oil pipeline
construction through Jamnagar Marine National
Park and Sanctuary, the apex Court in Essar Oil Ltd.
v Halar Utkarsh Samiti & Ors.,51 permitted such
laying of pipelines on the ground that it cannot
invariably lead to the destruction or removal of the
wild life in these ecologically sensitive areas. The
Court, instead of taking independent expert evidence
on the issue like it has done in all other cases, deferred
to the State’s judgment of possible damage and the
failure of respondent to place any contrary reports
before it.52 Furthermore, given a choice between
environment and development, in Research
Foundation for Science Technology and Natural
Resource Policy v Union of India & Ors.,53 the Court
seemed unequivocal of its choice to err on side of
development. It clearly displayed that it was in
favour of continuance of hazardous industry subject
to safeguards being followed and seemingly took
India’s economic growth rate of 9 per cent and
economic interests in ship wrecking industry as
overriding considerations. Lastly, in Karnataka
Industrial Areas Development Board v Sri. C.
Kenchappa & Ors.,54 the Court overturned a
direction by the Karnataka High Court to the
appellant to leave a land of one kilometer as a buffer
Law, Environment and Development Journal
56
49 Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 5 May 2004, (2004)
6 SCC 402, 407.
50 Later, in Research Foundation for Science Technology and
Natural Resources Policy v Union of India & Anr. Supreme
Court of India, Judgement of 5 January 2005, (2005) 13
SCC 186, the Court has held Deepak Nitrite’s case to be
confined to its own facts.
51 Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 19 January 2004,
(2004) 2 SCC 392, 408.
52 Id, at pp. 409-415.
53 Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 11 September
2007, 2007 (11) SCALE 75.
54 Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 12 May 2006,
(2006) 6 SCC 371.
55 The directions were on lines of M.C. Mehta v Union of
India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 11 October
1996, (1997) 3 SCC 715, following the precautionary
principle.
56 Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 30 December
1981, (1981) Supp SCC 81, 223.
57 Economic Survey 2007-2008, State of Economy, Chapter
1, p.1, available at http://indiabudget.nic.in/es2007-08/
chapt2008/chap11.pdf.
58 Economic Survey 2007-2008, Industry, Chapter 8, p.182,
available at http://indiabudget.nic.in/es2007-08/
chapt2008/chap81.pdf.
59 State of Punjab & Anr. v Devans Modern Breweries Ltd. &
Anr., Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 20
November 2003, 2003 (10) SCALE 202, 289-294, Research
Foundation for Science Technology and Natural Resource
Policy v Union of India & Ors. Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 11 September 2007, 2007 (11) SCALE 75,
80, J.K. Industries Ltd. & Anr. v Union of India & Ors.,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 19 November
2007, 2007 (13) SCALE 204, 290 and Maharashtra Agro
Industries Development Corporation Ltd. & Ors. v State of
Maharashtra & Anr., High Court of Bombay, Judgement
of 25 October 2005, (2006) 3 LLJ 102, 121.
An important ingredient of environmental litigation
is the element of procedural convenience. On the
procedural side, locus standi requirements have been
diluted in environmental actions and courts allow
citizens to file Public Interest Litigation (hereafter
‘PIL’) for addressing violations of statutory mandates
by the executive and private parties or situations
where legal lacunae still persist.60 PILs have emerged
as the most potent tool in the hands of Indian
judiciary. The Court has the power to refer scientific
and technical aspects for investigation and opinion
to expert bodies such as the Appellate Authority
under the National Environmental Appellate
Authority Act, 199761 and the power to direct the
Central Government to determine and recover the
cost of remedial measures from the polluter under Section
3 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.62
To sum up this section, despite all its downsides the
long journey of environmental jurisprudence in
India, when viewed in a holistic manner, can be best
described in Supreme Court’s own words as: ‘This
has been an interesting judicial pilgrimage for the
last four decades. In our opinion, this is a significant
contribution of the judiciary in making serious
endeavour to preserve and protect ecology and
environment, in consonance with the provisions of
the Constitution’.63
3
‘GREEN’ COURTS: THEORETICAL
JUSTIFICATIONS AND PRACTICAL
NECESSITY
The theoretical foundations of the advocacy for
Environmental Courts can be traced in the
arguments proposed by the proponents of specialised
courts in the renowned generalist versus specialised
courts debate. Specialised forums, it is contended,
are able to evolve superior procedural norms and
develop better quality of jurisprudence through
expert judges who have greater exposure to a
homogeneous legal policy regime. They bring
uniformity, consistency and predictability in
decision making which enhances public confidence
and helps in development of a rich body of
jurisprudence. Incidental benefits include time and
cost savings as the requirement of massive
documentation for understanding technical points
of law in the special field is averted and streamlined
procedures make litigation easier and quicker.64
Though there are pitfalls like tunnel vision65 and
capture by interest groups,66 yet, in view of the
practical necessity, specialisation appears to be an
inevitable phenomenon and the field of environmental
law has produced two excellent examples of successful
forums in Australia and New Zealand.
Green Courts in India
57
60 See Subhash Kumar’s case, note 14 above.
61 A.P. Pollution Control Board I case, note 2 above.
62 Indian Council for Enviro Legal Action v Union of India,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 18 April 1996,
(1996) 5 SCC 281.
63 Karnataka Industrial Areas Development Board v Sri. C.
Kenchappa & Ors., Supreme Court of India, Judgement
of 12 May 2006, (2006) 6 SCC 371.
64 See The American Bar Association Central and East
European Law Initiative (CEELI), ‘Concept Paper on
Specialised Courts’, 25 June 1996, Edward K. Cheng, ‘The
Myth of the Generalist Judge: An Empirical Study of
Opinion Specialisation in the Federal Courts of Appeals’,
available at http://works.bepress.com/cgi/
viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=edward_cheng
and Jeffrey W. Stempel, ‘Two Cheers For Specialisation’
61 Brook. L. Rev. 67, 88-89 (1995) [The benefits are
documented as: improved precision and predictability of
adjudication; more accurate adjudication; more coherent
articulation of legal standards; greater expertise of the
bench; economies of scale that flow from division of
labor, particularly including speed, reduced costs and
greater efficiency through streamlining of repetitive tasks
and wasted motions].
65 Edward K. Cheng note 64 above, Yu Wang, ‘The Impact
of Specialised Courts on the Federal Judicial System 1925-
1981: A Study of Federal Circuits’ Decision of Reversal’,
available at http://law.bepress.com/expresso/eps/1977,
Simon Rifkind, ‘A Special Court for Patent Litigation?
The Danger of a Specialised Judiciary’, 37 A.B.A. J.
425(1951) and Sarang Vijay Damle, ‘Specialise The Judge,
Not The Court: A Lesson From The German
Constitutional Court’, 91 Va. L. Rev. 1267 (2005) [A
related problem is a lack of ‘cross- pollination’ of ideas
in the common law when relying on specialised
judiciaries. Common-law judges benefit from their broad
exposure to legal problems in a variety of fields because
insights from one area of the law can be used in other
areas of the law].
66 Id.
The practical need for a ‘Green’ Court has been best
articulated by Lord Woolf, in his Garner lecture to
United Kingdom Environmental Law Association,
on the theme ‘Are the Judiciary Environmentally
Myopic?’,67 based on the extreme inadequacy of the
general courts to deal with increasing specialisation
in environmental law68 and the need to move
beyond their traditional role of detached
Wednesbury review. Thus, he proposed a ‘multi-
faceted, multi-skilled body which would combine
the services’ provided by existing forums in the
environmental field to act as ‘one stop shop’ for
faster, cheaper and more effective resolution of
environmental disputes because scientifically
unsound or delayed decisions may wreak havoc in
terms of irreversible environmental damage and
irreparable economic loss.
The objective of securing ‘environmental justice’
through adoption of flexible and people oriented
procedures offers another justification for such
forums. Internationally, the concept of easy access
to a fair, equitable, timely and inexpensive justice
system has been recognised as an important facet of
environmental governance.69 In the Indian context,
the Constitution guarantees the right to speedy
access to justice;70 a facet of which is necessarily
related with environmental rights.71 The most
Law, Environment and Development Journal
significant facets of environmental justice are ‘equal
justice’ and ‘social inclusion’,72 that is, simplification
of structures and procedures for potential claimants
in order to improve access to justice to those who
are socially excluded due to the labyrinthine
complexity of the present system. Article 39A73
mandates the Indian State to secure a legal system
which is socially inclusive and equally accessible to
all people and the jurisprudence of PIL stems from
this recognition of the rights of the deprived,
illiterate and the poor.74 The constitution of
environmental courts is thus a sacred constitutional
obligation upon the Indian State.
Furthermore, it has also been argued that
environmental law has grown as a specialised area
of law requiring separate adjudication due to certain
unique features75 viz. (1) existence of complex
technical/scientific questions; (2) overlapping of civil
and criminal remedies as well as public and private
interests in any environmental adjudication; (3) rapid
evolution of a substantial body of international
environmental instruments spanning across a gamut
of issues like trade in endangered species, ocean and
marine pollution , transnational shipments of
hazardous wastes and global climate change; and (4)
67 4 J.Envtl. Law 1(1992).
68 See Whitney, ‘The Case for Creating A Special
Environmental Court System-A Further Comment’, 15
WM. & Mary L. Rev. 33 (1973).
69 Article 9, Convention on Access to Information, Public
Participation in Decision Making and Access to Justice in
Environmental Matters, 1998, Johannesburg Principles on
the Role of Law and Sustainable Development (adopted
at the Global Judges Symposium, Johannesburg, South
Africa) 18-20 August 2002 [hereafter ‘The Johannesburg
Principles on the Role of Law and Sustainable
Development’] and Principle 10, Rio Declaration on
Environment and Development; Agenda 21, in Report of
the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development, Rio de Janeiro, UN Doc. A/CONF.151/
26/Rev.1 (Vol. 1), Annex II (1992), Chapter 8, Paragraph 2.
70 Salem Advocates Bar Association v Union of India,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 2 August 2005,
(2005) 6 SCC 344.
71 The Indian Parliament has already included various
Citizens’ Initiative Provisions viz. Section 49 of Water
(Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 and
Section 43 of Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution)
Act, 1981.
58
72 See The Johannesburg Principles on the Role of Law and
Sustainable Development, 2002, note 69 above [‘We
recognise that the people most affected by environmental
degradation are the poor, and that, therefore, there is an
urgent need to strengthen the capacity of the poor and
their representatives to defend environmental rights, so
as to ensure that the weaker sections of society are not
prejudiced by environmental degradation and are enabled
to enjoy their right to live in a social and physical
environment that respects and promotes their dignity’].
73 Article 39A reads as: Equal justice and free legal aid-
The State shall secure that the operation of the legal
system promotes justice, on a basis of equal opportunity,
and shall, in particular, provide free legal aid, by suitable
legislation or schemes or in any other way, to ensure
that opportunities for securing justice are not denied to
any citizen by reason of economic or other disabilities.
74 Guruvayur Devaswom Managing Committee v C.K. Rajan,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 14 August 2003,
(2003) 7 SCC 546 and People’s Union for Democratic Rights
& Ors. v Union of India & Ors., Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 18 September 1982, (1982) 3 SCC 235.
75Professor Richard Macrory & Michael Woods,
‘Modernising Environmental Justice: Regulation and the
Role of an Environmental Tribunal’, 2003, p.20, available
at http://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/environment/tribunals/
index.shtml.
development of fundamental environmental
principles such as the precautionary approach,
polluter-pays, sustainable development, prevention
at source, and procedural transparency.
However, the present efforts in India have been
triggered by the call from the Supreme Court to
constitute such courts. The practical necessity stems
from (1) lack of expertise with the courts, including
the Constitutional Courts, to judge merits of an
environmental issue plagued with scientific
uncertainty;76 and (2) labyrinthine routes provided
for review and appeals under the statutes to non-
expert bureaucrats leading to delay in adjudication.
The Supreme Court has, at least in three landmark
cases, expressed the difficulties arising out of lack of
expertise with the judges,77 which is best expressed
in the following words:
The cases involve the correctness of
opinions on technological aspects
expressed by the Pollution Control
Boards or other bodies whose
opinions are placed before the Courts.
In such a situation, considerable
difficulty is experienced by this Court
or the High Courts in adjudicating
upon the correctness of the
technological and scientific opinions
presented to the Courts or in regard
to the efficacy of the technology
proposed to be adopted by the
industry or in regard to the need for
alternative technology or modifications
as suggested by the Pollution Control
Board or other bodies.78
This inexpertise has thwarted judicial review as the
Court has started paying increased deference to the
opinion of expert bodies. In cases involving
Fundamental Rights under Article 21, the
appropriate standard has always been ‘primary
review’ of the merits of State action.79 However, of
late, the Court has started moving towards the
‘secondary review’ standard80 of Provincial Picture
Houses v Wednesbury Corporation.81 Primary review
by an expert judicial body is a necessity in view of
the shoddy nature of Environment Impact
Assessment in India82 where the authorities under
the statute tend to favour big industrial houses.83
Professor Richard Macrory explains the importance
of such a merits appeal in the following words worth
reproducing here: ‘A regulatory appeals system
which can deliver effective, consistent, and
authoritative rulings on the interpretation and
application of regulatory requirements can therefore
be seen as an essential building block - though not
the only one - in ensuring improved compliance
with, and the enforcement of environmental
legislation’.84
The second significant factor, contributing to the
‘practical necessity’ argument, is the fragmented
Green Courts in India
59
76 The Johannesburg Principles on the Role of Law and
Sustainable Development, 2002, note 69 above [‘We
express our conviction that the deficiency in the
knowledge, relevant skills and information in regard to
environmental law is one of the principal causes that
contribute to the lack of effective implementation,
development and enforcement of environmental law’].
77 M.C. Mehta v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 16 February 1986, (1986) 2 SCC 176, 202,
Indian Council for Enviro Legal Action v Union of India,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 13 February 1996,
(1996) 3 SCC 212 and A.P. Pollution Control Board I case,
note 2 above.
78 A.P. Pollution Control Board I case, note 2 above.
79 Bachan Singh v State of Punjab, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 9 May 1980, (1980) 2 SCC 684, Om Kumar
& Ors v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 17 November 2000, (2001) 2 SCC 386 and
Union of India & Ors. v Ganayutham, Supreme Court of
India, Judgement of 27 August 1997, (1997) 7 SCC 463.
80 Tehri Bandh Virodhi Sangarsh Samiti & Ors. v State of
U.P. & Ors., Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 7
November 1990, 1992 Supp(1) SCC 44, Narmada Bachao
Andolan case, note 16 above and N.D. Jayal’s case, note
17 above.
81 English Court of Appeal, Judgement of 7 November
1947, [1948] 1 KB 223.
82 Sanjay Jose Mullick, ‘Power Game in India:
Environmental Clearance And The Enron Project’, 16
Stan. Envtl. L.J. 256 (1997) and Aruna Murthy &
Himansu Sekhar Patra, ‘Environment Impact Assessment
Process In India And The Drawbacks’, September 2005,
available at http://www.freewebs.com/epgorissa/
[Highlighting the poor quality of EIA Reports which
are generally incomplete due to omission of significant
information and provided with false data].
83 P. Devarajan, ‘Is nature not worth any notice?’, Hindu
Business Line, 8 June 2007.
84 Professor Richard Macrory & Michael Woods, Paragraph
4.4, note 75 above.
nature of remedies under the current dispensation
which provides for multiple appeal routes under
different statutes.85 The proposed Environmental
Courts would act as ‘one stop shop’ or single window
for all environmental adjudication. Rationalisation
of such fragmented and diversified jurisdictions of a
number of authorities has been an important aim of
such courts in New South Wales, Australia and New
Zealand. In the United Kingdom, the idea has been
toyed with mainly because the system has grown
‘too complex, unintelligible to the general public,
lacking any underlying coherence and thus failing
to reflect contemporary developments in
environmental law’.86 Moreover, the existing
authorities, in the Indian context, lack the
combination of judicial and technical expertise, for
example, the qualifications of the persons to be
appointed as appellate authorities under section 28
of the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution)
Act, 1974, section 31 of the Air (Prevention and
Control of Pollution) Act, 1981 and under Rule 12
of the Hazardous Wastes (Management and
Handling) Rules, 1989, are not clearly spelt out. The
Supreme Court has noted regional disparities created
by such open provisions viz. while the appellate
authority under section 28 in the State of Andhra
Pradesh as per the notification of the Andhra
Pradesh Government is a retired High Court Judge
with no expert to help him in technical matters and
the same authority as per the notification in State of
Delhi is the Financial Commissioner who is neither
a regular judicial member nor a technical expert.87
Going further, under the National Environmental
Tribunal Act, 1995, the Tribunal may either have a
Judge/ retired Judge of the Supreme or High Court
or a Secretary to Government or Additional
Secretary who has been a Vice-Chairman for two
years as Chairman of the Tribunal. This involvement
of executive authorities deprives the process of
procedural fairness due to lack of public hearings,
restricted procedural rights and lack of transparency
and consequently, such a system fails to contribute
to the development of a body of legal principles
which is indispensable for the development of
efficient environmental governance system.88
To crown it all, the Constitutional Courts are faced
with the Sisyphean task of clearing a burgeoning
docket of cases reaching them through multifarious
appellate routes under the Constitution and other
statutes. The 124th Report of the LCI describes the
pendency of cases in the High Courts as ‘catastrophic,
crisis ridden, almost unmanageable, imposing an
immeasurable burden on the system’.89 Thus, they
are not able to devote requisite time and attention to
pressing issues of environmental concern in the face
of a manifold rise and high visibility of environmental
litigation. Lastly, the presence of a specialist court
will also increase public, government and industry
awareness of environmental issues as witnessed in
New South Wales.90 From a holistic perspective, the
rational for a ‘green’ court can be best articulated in
the following words:
The costs and administrative changes
involved in setting up such a Tribunal
to handle the majority of existing
appeals would be modest compared
to the policy gains to be made. Such a
Tribunal would bring a greater
consistency of approach to the
application and interpretation of
environmental law and policy. The
improvements in authority and
specialist knowledge would also foster
increased confidence in those subject
to environmental regulation, the
regulatory authorities, and the general
public. The Environmental Tribunal
would lead to the better application
Law, Environment and Development Journal
60
85 Robert Carnwath, ‘Environmental Enforcement: The
Need for a Specialist Court’, [1992] J.P.L. 799.
86 Professor Richard Macrory & Michael Woods, note 75
above.
87 A.P. Pollution Control Board I case, note 2 above and A.P.
Pollution Control Board II cases, note 2 above.
88 Justice Paul L. Stein, ‘New directions in the Prevention
and Resolution of Environmental Disputes - Specialist
Environmental Courts’, Speech at The South-East Asian
Regional Symposium On The Judiciary And The Law of
Sustainable Development 1999, Paragraph 11, available at
http://www.bocsar.nsw.gov.au/lawlink/supreme_court/
ll_sc.nsf/pages/SCO_speech_stein_060399a.
89 Law Commission of India, ‘124th Report on a Fresh Look
at High Court Arrears’, available at http://
lawcommissionofindia.nic.in/101-169/Report124.pdf
[herafter 124th LCR].
90 Professor Richard Macrory & Michael Woods, note 75
above.
construction, management of natural resources and
urban design or heritage.94
The Court exercises a combinatorial appellate
jurisdiction95 under planning and production statues
and a ‘reviewing and enforcement jurisdiction’ in
relation to environmental and planning statutes. Its
jurisdiction extends to matters ancillary to a matter
that falls within its jurisdiction;96 thus enabling it
to adjudicate matters which incidentally affect
environment. The Court’s doors are open to anyone
complaining of violation of the relevant statutes.
Section 22 empowers the Court to grant all remedies
of any nature, conditionally or unconditionally, so
that all controversy is completely and finally
determined and multiplicity of proceedings is
avoided.97 On the procedural plane, the Court is not
bound to follow rules of evidence and may obtain
assistance of any person having professional or
technical qualifications relevant to any issue.98
Justice Paul Stein, Judge, LCE, has highlighted the
following benefits arising out of the Court’s
integrated jurisdiction over the last 20 years:99
(1) Decrease in multiple proceedings arising
out of the same environmental dispute;
(2) Reduced litigation with consequent savings
to the community;
(3) A single combined jurisdiction is
administratively cheaper than multiple
separate tribunals;
(4) A greater degree of certainty in
development projects;
(5) Reduction in costs and delays may lead to
cheaper project development and cost for
consumers;
of current environmental law and
policy, a more secure basis for
addressing future challenges,
increased public confidence in how
we handle environmental regulation,
and the improved environmental
outcomes which should follow.91
4
AN OVERVIEW OF ENVIRONMENTAL
COURTS IN OTHER JURISDICTIONS
Two important precedents of Environmental Courts
are furnished by the Land and Environmental Court
(hereafter ‘LEC’) in New South Wales, Australia and
the New Zealand Environment Court (hereafter
‘NZEC’). A brief description of the structure,
powers and procedure of both these courts is
indispensable for a critical understanding of LCI’s
recommendations as both the Supreme Court92 and
the LCI, characterising these experiments as ‘ideal’,
have heavily relied on them to define the proposed
Indian system.
4.1 The Land and Environment
Court, Australia
The LEC, established under the Land and
Environment Court Act, 1979, is a superior court
of record having same jurisdiction as the Supreme
Court of New South Wales93 and is composed of
Judges and nine technical and conciliation assessors.
The Judges and Commissioners are appointed by the
Governor and the Commissioners are required to
have the widest possible qualifications viz. special
knowledge or qualification in town planning,
environmental planning, environmental science
including matters relating to protection of the
environment and environmental assessment,
architecture, engineering, surveying or building
Green Courts in India
61
91 Id, at Paragraph 17.1.
92 A.P. Pollution Control Board I case, note 2 above.
93 Australia, Land and Environment Court Act, 1979
(NSW), Section 20 (2).
94 Id, Section12.
95 Id, Sections 17 and 18 [appeals under statutes relating to
local government], Section 21A (class 6) [appeals from
convictions relating to environmental offences] and
Section 2IB (class 7) [other appeals relating to
environmental offences].
96 Id, Section 16.
97 Id, Section 22.
98 Id, Section 38.
99 Justice Paul L. Stein, Paragraph 91, note 88 above.
(6) Greater convenience, efficiency and
effectiveness in development control
decisions.
The efficient and timely disposal of cases by LEC is
a well recognised fact and the available figures100
reveal that the Court has an ideal clearance ratio101
of 100 per cent. It has established consultative
committee in form of ‘Court Users Group’ whose
main function is to recommend to the Chief Judge
improvements in the functioning and services
provided by the Court and act as a communication
channel to disseminate court related information.
The Group has a wide range of membership across
engineering, architectural, planning, surveying
streams along with representatives of the legal
profession.102 In overall terms, the LEC has been
an outstanding success in terms of efficiency and
effectiveness.103
4.2 The New Zealand Environment
Court
The NZEC, established under the Resource
Management Act, 1991 (hereafter ‘RMA’), is an
independent specialised court consisting of
Environment Judges and Environment
Commissioners acting as technical experts. The
Governor-General appoints them for a period of five
years on the recommendation of the Minister of
Justice, while ensuring a mix of knowledge and
experience including commercial and economic
affairs, local government, community affairs,
planning and resource management, heritage
protection, environmental science, architecture,
engineering, minerals and alternative disputes
resolution processes.
The RMA enjoins the Court with a general duty of
promoting sustainable management in accordance
with the Act and the duty of avoiding, remedying
or mitigating adverse effects on the environment.
The Court exercises a wide spectrum of powers over
environmental issues104 which include three
prominent areas viz. (1) power to make declarations
of law;105 (2) power of appellate review on a de
novo106 basis of resource consents and proposed
district and regional plans/ policy statements;107 and
(3) power to enforce duties under the RMA through
civil and criminal proceedings.108
The Court can make declarations on questions
regarding division of authority between regional
authorities and conformance of policy plans/
statements and acts of government entities with
RMA or the policy plans.109 Under its appellate
jurisdiction, it reviews planning instruments like
regional policy statements/ plans and resource
consents on merits. It has the power to either
confirm or direct the local authority to modify,
delete, or insert any provision referred to it and such
authority is enjoined to effectuate the decision of
the Court.110 Lastly, it can issue ‘enforcement
orders’ on application of any person on any of the
four grounds specified underneath, that is:111
Law, Environment and Development Journal
62
100 The Land and Environment Court of NSW, ‘Annual
Review, 2005’, available at http://
www.lawlink.nsw.gov.au/lawlink/lec/ll_lec.nsf/pages/
LEC_annualreviews.
101 A measure of whether the Court is keeping up with its
workload. It is the number of finalisations divided by
the number of lodgments/registrations (multiplied by
100 to convert to a percentage).
102 Dennis A. Cowdroy, ‘The Land and Environment Court
of New South Wales - A Model For The United
Kingdom’, [2002] J.P.L. 59.
103 Justice Paul L. Stein, Paragraph 91, note 88 above.
104See Ministry of New Zealand, ‘Your Guide to Environment
Court: An Everyday Guide to the RMA Series 6.1’,
available at http://www.mfe.govt.nz/publications/rma/
everyday/court-guide-jun06/html/page2.html.
105 New Zealand, Resource Management Act, 1991, Sections
310- 313.
106A de novo review entails that not only does the Court
decide the ultimate merits of the decisions it reviews,
but it does so based on evidence that is adduced anew
before the court, rather than on the evidence that was
before the Council from which the appeal or reference
is made to it. Section 290 (1) specifies that in exercising
its appeal powers, the Environment Court ‘has the same
power, duty, and discretion . . . as the person against
whose decision an appeal or inquiry is brought’. This
can be contrasted with the Indian standard of review
wherein the Court determines only the legality and
propriety of the decision making process without
interfering with merits of the decision itself.
107RMA, Sections 120, 292, 293.
108Id, Sections 314-321 and 338 -343.
109Id, Section 310 (b) and (c) and Bret C. Birdsong,
‘Adjudicating Sustainability: New Zealand’s
Environment Court’, 29 Ecology L.Q. 1, 26-38 (2002).
110Id, Sections 120 and 290 (2).
111Id, Sections 314 and 316.
a. Injunction against actions contrary to the
provisions of the RMA, regulations, rules
in regional or district plans, or resource
consents; or
b. Injunction against action that ‘is likely to
be noxious, dangerous, offensive, or
objectionable to such an extent that it has
or is likely to have an adverse effect on
the environment’; or
c. Directing a person affirmatively to comply
with the RMA and other instruments or
to avoid, remedy, or mitigate adverse
effects on the environment caused by or
on behalf of that person; or
d. Compensating others for reasonable costs
associated with avoiding, remedying or
mitigating effects caused by a person’s
failure to comply with one of several
instruments, including rules in plans or
resource consents.
With the consent of the parties, at any time after
proceedings are lodged, the Court may ask one or
more of its Environment Commissioners to conduct
mediation or conciliation to resolve the dispute.112
The mediation service of the Court is regarded as
‘innovative’ and cost-effective as its own technically-
oriented Commissioners act as mediators.113 On the
procedural side, limitations on rules of evidence are
non-existent114, proceedings are less formal and it
encourages individuals and groups to represent
themselves. Third parties may also apply to it for
an order to enforce the RMA against anyone else.
Its decisions may be appealed to the High Court on
questions of law only.115 In view of its overarching
powers, it has been rightly characterised as the
‘adjudicator of sustainability’.116
Initially, the Court was confronted with delays in
disposal of mounting caseload. However, in 2003,
the Government provided additional financial
resources after a thorough review of this issue.117
Since then, the case pendency has halved and the
‘clearing ratio’ has improved to a level above 90 per
cent which speaks volumes about its efficiency.118
5
AN OVERVIEW OF LAW COMMISSION
OF INDIA’S RECOMMENDATIONS
The LCI undertook the study of Environmental
Courts in pursuance of the call by the apex Court
to do so. It has proposed a structure in which
Environmental Courts will be established at the state
level with flexibility to have one Court for more
than one State.119 The 186th Report summarises the
major recommendations relating to the composition,
powers and procedures of the proposed courts which
can be delineated systematically under the following
heads:
5.1 Composition of the ‘Green’
Court
The Court shall consist of three Judicial Members,
who are either (a) sitting or retired Judges of a High
Court or (b) experienced Members of the Bar with
not less than 20 years standing.120 In the
appointment process, it is proposed to provide
preference to those who have had experience in
environmental matters as judges or lawyers. The
judges will be appointed by the Central Government
Green Courts in India
63
112Id, Section 268.
113Stephen Higgs, ‘Mediating Sustainability: The Public
Interest Mediator in The New Zealand Environment
Court’, 37 Envtl. L. 61 (2007).
114 New Zealand, Resource Management Act, 1991, Sections
274 (1) and 276.
115Id, Section 287.
116See Birdsong, note 109 above, at p. 38.
117 Ministry for the Environment, ‘Reducing the Delays:
Enhancing New Zealand’s Environment Court’,
March 2003, available at http://www.mfe.govt.nz/
publications/rma/reducing-the-delays-mar03.pdf.
118 New Zealand Environment Court, ‘Annual Report of
the Registrar, 2005’, at p.8, ‘Annual Report of the
Registrar, 2006’, at p.9, and ‘Annual Report of the
Registrar, 2007’, at p.8, available at http://
www.justice.govt.nz/environment/reports/default.asp.
119 186th LCR, at p.142.
120 Id, at p.142.
in consultation with the State Government, the
Chief Justice of the State/Union Territory
concerned and the Chief Justice of India.121
In respect of each court, the judicial members will
be assisted by three environmental experts, to be
known as the ‘Commissioners’. Without being a part
of the bench itself, they will constitute a statutory
panel for proffering independent advice and
assistance to the court in analysing and assessing
scientific or technological issues. It has been
recommended to have a mandatory presence of such
experts during the course of the hearings. Each
Commissioner must have (1) a degree in
environmental sciences together with at least five
years experience as an environmental scientist or
engineer; or (2) adequate knowledge of and
experience to deal with various aspects of problems
relating to environment, and in particular the
scientific or technical aspects of environmental
problems, including the protection of environment
and environment impact assessment. The
appointment will be made by the concerned State
Government in consultation with the Chief Justice
of the State High Court and Chairman of the
concerned Environmental Court. The tenure of both
the Judges and Commissioners will be five years.122
5.2 Jurisdiction and Powers of
‘Green’ Court
The proposed court will have jurisdiction over all
environmental issues with specific inclusion of the
following:123
a) protection of the right to safe drinking
water and the right to an environment that
is not harmful to one’s health or well being;
and
b) power to have the environment protected
for the benefit of present and future
generations so as to:
i) prevent environmental pollution
and ecological degradation;
Law, Environment and Development Journal
64
ii) promote conservation; and
iii) secure ecologically sustainable
development and use of natural
resources while promoting
justifiable economic and social
development.
Such jurisdiction shall specifically extend to the
following matters:124
a) the protection of natural environment,
forests, wild life, sea, lakes, rivers, streams,
fauna and flora;
b) preservation of natural resources of the
earth;
c) prevention, abatement and control of
environmental pollution including water,
air and noise pollution;
d) enforcement of any legal or constitutional
rights relating to environment and pollution
under the Constitution of India or under any
other law for the time being in force; and
e) protection of monuments and places,
objects of artistic or historical interest of
national importance as declared by the law
made by Parliament.
It has been proposed that the new Act should
incorporate the definition of ‘environment’ and
‘environmental pollution’ as provided in Section 2(a)
and Section 2(c) of the Environment (Protection)
Act, 1986 respectively. The proposed court shall
have original jurisdiction on environmental disputes
with all powers of a Civil Court and shall have the
power to grant all reliefs which the latter can grant
under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 or other
statutes like the Specific Relief Act, 1963.125 It will
have all appellate powers now conferred under the
Water (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act,
1974, the Air (Prevention & Control of Pollution)
Act, 1981, and on the appellate authorities
constituted under the various Rules made under the
121 Id, at pp. 153-154.
122 Id, at pp. 154- 155.
123 Id, at p. 146.
124Id, at p. 146.
125Id, at p. 145.
Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.126 In addition
to this, the jurisdiction of the tribunal under the
National Environment Tribunal Act, 1995 and the
authority under the National Environmental
Appellate Authority Act, 1997, is proposed to be
transferred to the Environment Court.127
The Law Commission has not proposed any review
role for the Court and has shunned the method of
extensive classification of cases into different classes
adopted in New Zealand. In addition to the strictly
judicial functions, the Court will be bestowed with
wide ‘policy making’ powers to frame schemes,
monitor them and modify them suitably.128
However, these powers are distinct from executive
policy making powers and limited to directions for
shifting or closure of polluting industries, workmen
compensations schemes, making provision for water
in new localities or securing justice inter partes. They
will have power to mould relief like Constitutional
Courts according to facts and circumstances of the
case as opposed to civil courts which grant only the
relief asked for.129
However, the LCI has thought it fit to deprive the
‘Green’ Courts of the writ powers exercised by the
High Courts under Article 226 of the Constitution
of India. The recommendation has been in view of
the judgment of Supreme Court in L. Chandra
Kumar v Union of India130; an issue which has been
discussed in detail underneath. Similarly, criminal
jurisdiction has been excluded from the court’s
purview solely because of lack of precedent in terms
of any special law where the appellate criminal
jurisdiction of the High Court has been transferred
to another court at the state level, manned by retired
judges.131 The decisions of the Court may be appealed
against in Supreme Court only on points of law and
the LCI argues that the presence of this efficacious
remedy will make the High Courts refrain from
interfering with the new courts in exercise of their
powers under Articles 226 and 227.132
5.3 Locus Standi and Procedural
Aspects
The locus standi requirements in case of original
petitions will be as flexible and wide as in case of PIL
before the Constitutional Courts. Any person or
organisation who or which is interested in the subject
matter or in public interest may approach the court
subject to the exception that the courts may inflict
exemplary costs in case of frivolous or vexatious
litigation.133 On the procedural side, ‘Green’ Courts
will not be bound by rules of evidence laid down in
Indian Evidence Act, 1872, and would be able to
formulate their own procedural norms. They will
be able to consult experts outside the statutory body
of Commissioners. The Judges and Commissioners
will have the necessary powers to make spot
inspections and record oral evidence.134 Conciliation
and mediation at any stage of the proceeding, original
or appellate, shall be encouraged.135 However, in all
cases, the fundamental principles of natural justice
will be adhered to.
6
THE DARK SIDE OF LAW COMMISSION
OF INDIA’S RECOMMENDATIONS
John S. Hammond, in his seminal work titled ‘The
Hidden Traps in Decision Making’, has enumerated
various psychological clogs and prejudices, called
‘traps’, which subtly operate to cloud the mind of a
decision maker and prevent him from adopting the
best course amongst the possible alternative
choices.136 Though originally applied in context of
business decision making, the ‘trap hypothesis’
extends even to recommendatory bodies and law
makers in the legal field. The LCI does not seem to
be an unaffected decision maker while endorsing the
need for constitution of specialised Environmental
Courts as though the aforesaid recommendations
126Id, at pp. 142-144.
127Id, at p. 149.
128Id, at p. 150.
129Id, at p. 151.
130Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 18 March 1997,
(1997) 3 SCC 261.
131186th LCR, at pp. 155-156.
132Id, at p. 157, 159.
133 Id, at p. 152.
134 Id, at p. 148.
135 Id, at p. 148.
136 John S. Hammond et al., ‘The Hidden Traps in Decision
Making’ (September-October 1998) Harv. Bus. Rev. 47.
Green Courts in India
65
combine the essential attributes of comprehensivity
and clarity, yet they fail to (a) secure the
independence of courts from executive and; (b)
ensure potent enforcement powers to them by
making them a part and parcel of the lower judiciary.
Specialised judicial authorities for environmental
adjudication have already been created in India. The
National Environment Tribunal Act, 1995, was
enactment to provide for strict liability for damages
arising out of any accident occurring while handling
any hazardous substance and for the establishment
of the Tribunal for effective and expeditious disposal
of cases arising from such accidents, with a view to
giving relief and compensation for damages to
person, property and the environment. However,
the Act has not been notified by the executive
government and thus, during the last twelve years,
no Tribunal is in existence. The LCI itself has
expressed anguish over the gross failure of the Act
noting that if a tragedy like the Bhopal Gas Disaster
reoccurs today, there is no Tribunal which would
grant damages expeditiously.137 The National
Environmental Appellate Authority Act, 1997,
intended to provide for the establishment of a
National Environmental Appellate Authority to
hear appeals with respect to restriction of areas in
which any industries, operation or process or class
of industries, operation or processes shall be carried
out or shall not be carried out subject to safeguards
under the Environmental (Protection) Act, 1986.
However, the LCI has noted that the narrow
jurisdiction of the authority was ineffectual and there
have been no appointments after the retirement of
the first Chairman to the Authority.138
Thus, both the Tribunals have been rendered non-
functional due to the laxity of the executive
Government. However, even in face of such gross
failures, the LCI has failed to envisage a scheme for
total independence of the future ‘Green’ Courts
from government control. The reasons for
chartering a new course and treading a new path in
respect of ‘Green’ Courts have been articulated in
the following section with suggestions of appropriate
modifications and it is necessary to emphasise that
the broader premises articulated apply to all national
systems which genuinely desire such an overhaul of
judicial administration.
6.1 Executive Interference in
Functioning of ‘Green’ Courts
The makers of the Indian Constitution never sought
to leave the judiciary at the mercy of the other
branches.139 Independence of judiciary is the bulwark
of the Indian democratic system140 and forms a part
of the basic structure141 of the Constitution.142 The
137 186th LCR, at p.101,104.
138 Id, at p.104.
139M. P. Singh, ‘Securing The Independence of The
Judiciary-The Indian Experience’, 10 Ind. Int’l & Comp.
L. Rev. 245 (2000).
140Union of India v Sankal Chand Himatlal Sheth & Anr.,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 19 September
1977, (1977) 4 SCC 193 [The Court declared that ‘.. the
independence of judiciary is a fighting faith of our
Constitution. Fearless justice is a cardinal creed of our
founding document....’].
141The Basic Structure doctrine was propounded by the
Supreme Court in Keshavananda Bharati v Union of
India, Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 24 April
1973, (1973) 4 SCC 225 and postulates that elemental or
basic features like democratic governance, secularism,
federalism, independence of judiciary, separation of
powers, fundamental rights like right to life, the
harmonic balance between fundamental rights and
Directive Principles of State Policy, cannot be abrogated
by the Parliament through a constitutional amendment.
Any constitutional amendment which runs contrary to
these principles is unconstitutional and void. See Indira
Gandhi v Raj Narain, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 7 November 1975, (1975) Supp SCC 1,
Minerva Mills v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 9 May 1980, (1980) 3 SCC 625, Waman
Rao v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 13 November 1980, (1981) 2 SCC 362,
L. Chandra Kumar v Union of India, Supreme Court of
India, Judgement of 18 March 1997, (1997) 3 SCC 261
and Andreas Buss, ‘Dual Legal Systems and the Basic
Structure Doctrine of Constitutions: The Case of India’,
19 NO. 2 Can. J.L. & Soc’y 23, 38-39 (2004).
142 Sub-Committee of Judicial Accountability v Union of India,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 24 October 1991,
(1991) 4 SCC 699, All India Judges Association & Ors. v
Union of India & Ors, Supreme Court of India, Judgement
of 24 August 1993, (1993) 4 SCC 288, Supreme Court
Advocates on Record Ass’n v Union of India, Supreme
Court of India, Judgement of 6 October 1993, (1993) 4
SCC 441, Registrar (Admn.), High Court of Orissa, Cuttack
v Sisir Kanta Satapathy, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 16 September 1999, (1999) 7 SCC 725 and State
of Bihar & Anr. v Bal Mukund Sah & Ors., Supreme Court
of India, Judgement of 14 March 2000, (2000) 4 SCC 640.
Law, Environment and Development Journal
66
Indian Constitution specifically directs the state ‘to
separate the judiciary from the executive in the public
services of the State’.143 The concept of independence
signifies lack of powers of the government to ‘abolish
this institution, replace it, or make significant changes
in its structure’.144 The Supreme Court has wrestled
back power of appointment of judges of the superior
judiciary from the executive despite a clear
constitutional mandate entrusting wide powers with
the executive.145 The Court has struck a resounding
note in this aspect:
Judicial independence cannot be
secured by making mere solemn
proclamations about it. It has to be
secured both in substance and in
practice. It is trite to say that those
who are in want cannot be free. Self-
reliance is the foundation of
independence. The society has a stake
in ensuring the independence of the
judiciary, and no price is too heavy to
secure it. To keep the judges in want
of the essential accoutrements and
thus to impede them in the proper
discharge of their duties, is to impair
and whittle away justice itself.146
Thus, the basic concern is to obtain a more effective
and vital judicial system so as to secure and
strengthen the imperative confidence of the people
in the administration of justice. The Constitution
provides recognition and constitutional protection
to the subordinate courts147 in respect of
recruitment and appointment of judges through a
complete code in form of Chapter VI of Part VI- an
impenetrable insulation from the interference of any
other outside agency.148 The power of appointment
to subordinate judiciary belongs to High Courts and
neither the Parliament of India nor the Executive
(President or Governor) can usurp this function
through either legislation or executive orders.149
In view of this, it is important to visualise the
positioning of the proposed Environmental Courts
which, though equivalent to civil courts in all other
respects, will be set up under a statute of the
Parliament. They will adjudicate on matters relating
to crucial Fundamental Rights of the citizens but will
still be denied of constitutional protection and
guarantee of independence.150 The status, as I
perceive it, will not be more than that of a statutory
tribunal under the guise of a ‘court’. It is an open
secret that the entrustment of powers of appointment
of judges of any court/tribunal with the executive
has led to hindrance in the functioning of those
institutions by a spate of improper and illegal
appointments which have eventually been challenged
in the Constitutional Courts. The plight of these
tribunals in respect of their judicial manpower is
better left unsaid. In view of this bitter experience, it
is necessary to ensure that the ‘Green’ Courts should
not meet the same fate by failing to inspire public
confidence. The reason is crystal clear: the inferior
status of such courts/tribunals.
Environment laws are an area in which the
Government of India has been indulging in mere
platitude as is evident from the fact that over the
past six decades of independence precious little has
been done at the ground level. From the recent
events in respect of the Godavarman case, it is
evident that the executive branch reckons
environmental governance as its sole domain.151 The
143India, Constitution of India, 1950, Article 50.
144 Eli M. Salzberger, ‘A Positive Analysis of The Doctrine
of Separation of Powers, or: Why Do We Have An
Independent Judiciary?’, 13 Int’l Rev. L. & Econ. 349,
351 (1993).
145M. P. Singh, ‘Securing The Independence of The
Judiciary - The Indian Experience’, 10 Ind. Int’l & Comp.
L. Rev. 245 (2000) and Supreme Court Advocates on
Record Ass’n v Union of India, Supreme Court of India,
Judgement of 6 October 1993, (1993) 4 SCC 441.
146All India Judges’ Association & Ors v Union of India &
Ors., Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 24 August
1993, (1993) 4 SCC 288.
147India, Constitution of India, 1950, Articles 233-237.
148 State of Bihar & Anr. v Bal Mukund Sah & Ors., Supreme
Court of India, Judgement of 14 March 2000, (2000) 4
SCC 640.
149 Id.
150Laifan Lin, ‘Judicial Independence in Japan: A Re-
Investigation for China’,13 Colum. J. Asian L. 185, 191,
198 (1999) [‘The most important aspect in the
independence of the judiciary is its constitutional
position….The constitution must ensure a constitutional
position of dignity to the judiciary’].
151 See Dhananjay Mahapatra, ‘Centre wants Green Bench
disbanded’, 21 July 2007, available at http://
www.forestcaseindia.org/f9/document.2007-08-
13.2179904688.
Green Courts in India
67
Central Government has vehemently urged the
Supreme Court to wind up its Forest Bench.152 The
government has opined that the ad hoc orders passed
by the Forest Bench, on basis of the opinion of
persons not qualified in scientific forestry, have led
to usurpation of executive’s powers and have
contributed to growing poverty, social unrest and
spurt in Naxal activities.153 Furthermore, the
Ministry of Environment and Forest has been at
loggerheads with the apex Court over the
composition of the Forest Advisory Council154 and
has refused to include persons recommended by the
Court in the Council.155 The Ministry is also trying
to overturn Court’s wide definition of ‘forest’ by
restricting it to ‘legally notified forests’.156 Over the
past twelve years, the authorities have consciously
violated the orders of the Court regarding ban on
sawmill licencing.157
Such attitude of Government puts a big question on
the independence of the proposed Environment
Court. The Law Ministry is already surreptitiously
tampering with the LCI’s proposal to induct retired
bureaucrats onto the ‘green’ benches.158 The Bill is
under wraps but news reports reveal that it proposes
to establish a two-tier structure, a National
Environment Tribunal (NET) at the Centre and
Regional Environment Tribunals (RET) for groups
of states. The NET will have a chairperson and nine
members. Besides the chairperson and one member,
who are judicial members, eight experts from the
fields of physics, chemistry, botany, zoology,
engineering, environmental economics and social
sciences (either sociology or cultural anthropology)
and forestry would form the NET. Such a shift from
‘court’ to ‘tribunal’ will erode the whole efficacy of
the exercise.
The independence of the judiciary from political
pressures is an essential aspect of justice at any
level.159 It is advisable to scrap the proposal of
statutory constitution of Environmental Courts in
the present form. The more appropriate way is to
constitute them in form of a specialised division of
the existing High Courts. To make, environmental
justice more people-oriented, the existing District
Courts should also have such divisions from which
the appeal will lie to the High Court divisions. It is
highly significant, at this juncture, to stop repeating
the mistake of executive involvement is judicial
appointments. It will be beneficial to entrust the
power of appointment to the Higher Courts which
will at once ensure the quality of appointment and
the independence of judiciary.160
152 See J. Venkatesan, ‘Wind up Forest Bench: Centre’, The
Hindu, 21 July 2007, ‘Centre Urges Apex Court to Wind
Up “Forest Bench”’, available at http://
www.forestcaseindia.org/f9/document.2007-08-
13.2788121453 and See Honorable Justice Sobchock
Sukharomna, ‘Establishing Green Bench within the
Supreme Court of Thailand’, Asia Pacific Regional
Conference on the Environmental Justice and
Enforcement, January 2008, available at http://
www.roap.unep.org/program/Documents/
Law08_presentations/Day1/Green_Bench_THA.pdf
[On the contrary, Thailand has formally established a
Green Bench within its Supreme Court].
153Dhananjay Mahapatra, note 151 above and Armin
Rosencraz & Sharachchandra Lele, note 38 above, at pp.
13-14.
154FAC is the highest Government-appointed advisory
body constituted under Section 3 of the Forest
(Conservation) Act, 1980, which is responsible for all
clearances related to any diversion of forest land for non-
forest purposes.
155 See ‘Govt, SC disagree over forest panel members’,
Indian Express, 6 January 2007 and Sonu Jain, ‘We need
experts, not activists, said Govt, rejecting all 9 names
proposed by SC panel’, Indian Express, 10 January 2007.
156 Sharachchandra Lele, ‘‘Defining’ Moment for Forests’,
Vol. XLII, No.25, Economic & Political Weekly, 2379
(23 June 2007).
157 Armin Rosencraz & Sharachchandra Lele, note 38 above,
at p 12.
158Kalpana Sharma, note 3 above.
159J. Clifford Wallace, ‘An Essay on Independence of The
Judiciary: Independence From What And Why’ 58
N.Y.U. Ann. Surv. Am. L. 241 (2001).
160 Maria Adebowale, ‘Using the Law: Access to
Environmental Justice Barriers and Opportunities’,
available at http://www.defra.gov.uk/environment/
enforcement/pdf/ejureport.pdf [stressing on
transparency in judicial appointment to environmental
courts to enhance public confidence], Jeffrey W.
Stempel, ‘Two Cheers For Specialisation’, 61 Brook. L.
Rev. 67 (1995) [‘Regardless of whether the critics or
proponents of specialisation are correct, specialised
courts will work best if they are not granted second-
class status. Insofar as possible, specialised courts should
have parity with the generalist bench’.] and The
American Bar Association Central and East European
Law Initiative (CEELI), Concept paper on Specialised
Courts, 25 June 1996 [arguing for minimisation of the
potential for reduced judicial stature and importance to
make specialised court effective].
Law, Environment and Development Journal
68
Furthermore, even the most pious utterances for the
establishment of an independent and effective
judicial system are mere empty rhetoric without a
‘guaranteed source of funding to carry out those
tasks’.161 Hamilton has argued that ‘[n]ext to
permanency in office, nothing can contribute more
to the independence of the judges than a fixed
provision for their support. . . . In the general course
of human nature, a power over a man’s subsistence
amounts to a power over his will’.162 Countries like
Japan have secured financial independence of the
judiciary through a budget allocation system
specifically designed for the judiciary.163 Under the
Indian system, the Government controls the finances
through the legislature without any say of the
judiciary.164 Given the necessity of collection of
independent expert evidence through spot
investigations coupled with the duty of these new
courts to settle environmental disputes in a time
bound manner and actively promote settlement
through conciliation and mediation, it is an
axiomatic truth that adequate and guaranteed
finances will be conditio sine qua non for them to
function efficiently. Court fees cannot be used to
finance the system as it will restrict access and, thus,
defeat the very rationale behind such an exercise.
Hence, it is imperative to make a constitutional
commitment of adequate funds for the functioning
of ‘green’ benches. Though it may seem to place a
little constraint on the maneuverability of
government finances, but this little sacrifice is worth
making for the huge benefit people will reap
transcending current generations.
Lastly, the constitution of these courts should not
be delegated to the Government by means of a
conditional legislation clause as the government may
keep the power in suspension even forever and the
proposal may never materialise just like the National
Environment Tribunal. Undeniably, the
independence of ‘green’ benches from the executive
branch is an essential and indispensable
requirement.165
6.2 Why Create Toothless
Institutions?
The main reason for creation of Environmental
Courts is the lack of expertise with the
Constitutional Courts in cases involving scientific
issues. However, the proposal seeks to constitute
them in form of civil courts and thus leave them
vulnerable to greater interference by these
inexperienced forums. The power to issue writs
under Article 226 is the most potent weapon in the
hands of the High Courts and these new courts, if
not equipped to exercise these powers, will be
toothless. The history of environmental cases is
replete with instances where the Governmental
agencies and Government have not been interested
in cooperating even with the superior courts.166 In
such a scenario, how much deference will such a
Sovereign pay to a civil court where the government
is often a party to litigation in such cases? The
attitude of Central Government to Supreme Court’s
forest bench, alluded to above, is a clear indication
of its intention to avoid judicial monitoring of its
discretion under environmental legislations.
The example of National Information Commission
shows how the Government Ministries refuse to
agree with the special forums in order to subserve
161Basic Principles on the Independence of the Judiciary,
adopted by the Seventh United Nations Congress on
the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of
Offenders, Held at Milan (26 August to 6 September
1985), Paragraph 7.
162Alexander Hamilton, ‘The Federalist No. 79’.
163Laifan Lin, ‘Judicial Independence in Japan: A Re-
Investigation for China’, note 150 above.
164Even the Supreme Court has found itself powerless to
do anything in respect of provision of finances for the
judiciary. State of U.P. & Ors. v Jeet S. Bisht & Anr.,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 18 May 2007,
(2007) 6 SCC 586.
165 Justice Paul L. Stein, Paragraph 91, note 88 above and
The Johannesburg Principles on the Role of Law and
Sustainable Development, 2002, note 69 above [‘We
affirm that an independent judiciary and judicial process
is vital for the implementation, development and
enforcement of environmental law’].
166 D.D. Vyas v Ghaziabad Development Authority,
Allahabad High Court, Judgement of 13 April 1992, AIR
1993 All. 57 [The Government intentionally omitted to
submit counter affidavits], Ashok v Union of India,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 2 May 1997,
(1997) 5 SCC 10 and M.C. Mehta v Union of India,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 21 April 1998,
AIR 1999 SC 1501.
Green Courts in India
69
their political interests.167 In view of this arm
twisting, it is required that the new courts should be
given a constitutional status and should be constituted
as divisions of the High Courts. The purpose of
creating modern ‘green’ judiciary will be defeated if
the ‘green’ courts do not have adequate mechanisms
like issuance of writs to ensure compliance with their
directions. The instance of Godavarman petition is
particularly instructive wherein the apex Court has
been using its extensive power under Article 32
through a continuing mandamus to ensure
management of forests according to the existing forest
legislations and the principle of sustainable
development, to prevent the rapid deforestation and
its concomitant environmental impact and to
promote afforestation. The Court has been able to
ensure compliance of its orders through the Central
Empowered Committee. Further, under Article 144,
all government authorities are constitutionally bound
to assist the Court and it exercises extensive powers
of contempt to discipline them. It is unimaginable
that Environmental Courts, in their proposed form,
will ever be able to ensure such compliance from even
regional or local authorities.
In respect of the New South Wales Environment
Court, Honourable Justice Paul L. Stein has pointed
out that its greatest strength lies in its position as a
part of the superior judiciary by virtue of which it
is able to secure obedience to its orders through
contempt procedures, thus enhancing its ability to
protect the environment.168 In that country as well,
there has been a temptation for Governments to seek
to overrule court decisions or exclude the Court’s
jurisdiction but this has resulted in a public backlash-
mainly because the court occupies the position in
the superior judiciary.169 He further notes:
The court’s wide-ranging jurisdiction
enables it to administer social justice
in the legislative scheme of
environmental laws, which travel far
beyond justice inter partes. Its status
as a superior court, with an integrated
jurisdiction, means that it can, as far
as is possible, completely resolve all
matters in controversy between the
parties and avoid multiplicity of
litigation……Indeed, the
establishment of a specialist superior
court (with judicial independence)
has, I have no doubt, served as a
bulwark against political attack.
The substance of environmental law cases is
indubitably that of Public Law and the judicial
pronouncements have implications, not only for the
immediate parties, but for the broader community
and the environment itself and only a superior court
can perform this function effectively. The courts in
their proposed forms cannot be given writ powers
as ultimately, they will again be subject to the writ
jurisdiction of High Courts as declared by the
Supreme Court in L. Chandra Kumar’s case;170 thus
resulting in more delays due to the two tier system
and providing a relevant and germane ground to the
Governments to eventually abolish them.171
Secondly, in the model proposed here, there should
be no reason for exclusion of criminal jurisdiction
relating to environmental offences as the division of
High Court could act as appellate body without any
167The National Information Commission has come at
loggerheads with the Government over the issue of
allowing public access to file notings in Government
Departments and cabinet papers. The Government is arm-
twisting the Commission in order to maintain secrecy
and has proposed to amend the Right to Information Act,
2005, to overcome its decision. See Siddharth Narrain,
‘The Information Commission’s Role is to act as a Non-
Government Arbiter’, The Hindu, 4 November 2005,
Siddharth Narrain, ‘Government flayed on file notings’
The Hindu, 9 December 2005 and Vidya Subrahmaniam,
‘A Commission under Siege’, The Hindu, 31 March 2007.
168 Justice Paul L. Stein, Paragraph 93, note 88 above.
169 Id.
170The Supreme Court declared the power of judicial
review vested in High Courts under Article 226 to be
an integral and essential feature of the basic structure of
the Indian Constitution. The Court held, in respect of
Administrative Tribunals, that they should entertain and
decide upon constitutional issues involved in service
matters as the exclusion of such issues from their
jurisdiction will defeat the purpose of their constitution
viz. reduction of the mounting caseload of High Courts.
However, tribunals cannot exercise power of issuing
writs to the exclusion of High Courts and will be subject
to the latter’s powers under Article 226.
171M.P. High Court Bar Association v Union of India & Ors.,
Supreme Court of India, Judgement of 17 September
2004, (2004) 11 SCC 766 [ The case presented a situation
wherein Administrative Tribunals were abolished by the
State on the pretext of increased delay and this move
was held to be constitutional by the Apex Court].
Law, Environment and Development Journal
70
controversy. The ‘green’ benches will be better able to
appreciate the environmental policy behind the offences
and would raise the standard of regulatory compliance
through proper sentences. The New South Wales
Court is exercising such an integrated jurisdiction
and there is no reason why such an ideal practice172
should not be adopted in India. In the words of
Professor Richard Macrory, the vesting of criminal
jurisdiction in the green court would ‘…also
command greater confidence from those charged
with enforcement responsibilities, as well as
providing greater assurance to the majority of
industries and individuals who comply with
environmental requirements, that transgressors are
being treated in an effective and consistent manner’.
Another significant objection relates to the
composition of the proposed forum. It is essential to
ensure more public participation in the process and
the panel of judges should include activists working
in the field of environment protection, understanding
and monitoring the environment and the inter-
linkages between different aspects of the environment
and who have manned many expert committees. The
proper bench composition should be two members
of judiciary and one environmental activist assisted
by three expert Commissioners as proposed.
7
CONCLUSION
In the proposed form, the ‘Green’ Courts will be
nothing more than tribunals under disguise. The
recommendation for institutional changes in the
existing High Courts as proposed here is not a new
proposition. The LCI in its 124th Report had
proposed for constitution of separate divisions of
the High Courts for different branches of law and
appointment of more Judges to man the separate
divisions while using the existing infrastructure.173
A very significant example of specialisation within
the Constitutional Court is that of the Federal
Constitutional Court of Germany which is divided
into two Senates- both handling different issues of
constitutional law and thus the dual-Senate system
is akin to creating two constitutional courts of
limited and exclusive jurisdiction.174
The proposed model will bring greater advantages
and efficiencies. Firstly, it will enhance the reputation
of the Environmental Courts by making them
effective instruments of environmental governance.
Secondly, it will solve the problem of boundary
disputes, such as determining the point at which a
tangential or peripheral environmental issue in a
pending case becomes sufficiently important to
suggest that the case be litigated in an Environmental
Court. In recent years, some Governments have also
begun to make significant changes in the institutional
structures of government in order to enable more
systematic consideration of the environment when
decisions are made on economic, social, fiscal, energy,
agricultural, transportation, trade and other policies,
as well as the implications of policies in these areas for
the environment.175 In such cases there cannot be
any ‘slicing of issues’ as such an approach has already been
frowned upon by the Supreme Court in L. Chandra
Kumar’s case. A High Court division is the best
competent forum to adjudicate all such mixed disputes.
The environmental justice scenario in India presents
a picture of near anarchy except for the rare
interventions by the Supreme Court itself. The irony
is that more than at any other time, India now needs
clarity of thinking, farsighted policies and an efficient
regulatory and judicial framework in the area of
environment as the Indian economy is growing at a
rate of 8 to 9 per cent annually and is evolving as
one of the fastest growing Emerging Market
Economies of the world riding on wave of extensive
industrial growth. The need for effective, powerful
and technically expert ‘superior’ Green Courts is
too obvious to be distinctly emphasised.
174 See Sarang Vijay Damle, ‘Specialise The Judge, Not The
Court: A Lesson From The German Constitutional
Court’, 91 Va. L. Rev. 1267, 1298 (2005).
175 Agenda 21, in Report of the United Nations Conference
on Environment and Development, Rio de Janeiro, UN
Doc. A/CONF.151/26/Rev.1 (Vol. 1), Annex II (1992),
Chapter 8, Paragraph 2.
172 See Dennis A. Cowdroy, ‘The Land and Environment
Court of New South Wales - A Model For The United
Kingdom’, [2002] J.P.L. 59.
173 124th LCR, note 89 above.
Green Courts in India
71
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