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Supreme Court Strikes Down Ex Post Facto Environmental Clearances as Unconstitutional: “Violation of Article 21, an Anathema to Environmental Jurisprudence — No Development at the Cost of Environment”

Supreme Court Strikes Down Ex Post Facto Environmental Clearances as Unconstitutional: “Violation of Article 21, an Anathema to Environmental Jurisprudence — No Development at the Cost of Environment”

Supreme Court Strikes Down Ex Post Facto Environmental Clearances as Unconstitutional: “Violation of Article 21, an Anathema to Environmental Jurisprudence — No Development at the Cost of Environment”

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Court’s Decision

The Supreme Court struck down the 2017 Notification and the 2021 Office Memorandum (OM) permitting ex post facto Environmental Clearances (ECs), declaring them “completely arbitrary and illegal” and violative of Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution. The Court restrained the Central Government from issuing any further circulars, orders, or memoranda that permit ex post facto ECs or regularize acts done in contravention of the 2006 EIA Notification. However, ECs already granted under the impugned notifications shall remain unaffected.


Facts

After the 2006 EIA Notification mandated prior ECs for projects falling under certain categories, the Ministry of Environment issued the 2017 Notification permitting ex post facto ECs for projects that had violated these requirements as of 14 March 2017. This was initially described as a one-time measure. However, this process was continued through the 2021 OM, which set out a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for granting ECs even for completed or ongoing projects commenced without prior clearance. Multiple writ petitions were filed challenging the validity of the 2017 Notification and 2021 OM. One of the impugned documents was already quashed by the Madras High Court in 2024 but was allowed to operate prospectively, which became a subject of appeal.


Issues

  1. Whether the 2017 Notification permitting ex post facto ECs is legal and valid under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  2. Whether the 2021 OM indirectly enables the grant of ex post facto ECs despite the prohibition by law and Supreme Court judgments.
  3. Whether the continuation of such a regime violates the right to a pollution-free environment under Article 21.

Petitioner’s Arguments


Respondent’s Arguments


Analysis of the Law


Precedent Analysis

  1. Common Cause v. Union of India (2017): The Court held that ex post facto ECs are “completely alien to environmental jurisprudence”.
  2. Alembic Pharmaceuticals Ltd. v. Rohit Prajapati (2020): The Circular permitting ex post facto ECs was held unsustainable in law.
  3. Electrosteel Steels Ltd. v. Union of India (2023): Reinforced that pollution laws must be strictly enforced and environmental compliance is essential for public health and sustainable development.

Court’s Reasoning

“The concept of an ex post facto EC is in derogation of the fundamental principles of environmental jurisprudence and is an anathema to the EIA Notification.”


Conclusion

The Supreme Court allowed the writ petitions and civil appeals and passed the following directives:

  1. Struck down the 2017 Notification and the 2021 OM as illegal and arbitrary.
  2. Restrained the Central Government from issuing any circulars or notifications permitting ex post facto ECs in any form.
  3. Upheld the ECs already granted under the impugned provisions until the date of judgment (May 16, 2025), leaving them unaffected.

Implications

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