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On the Right to a Healthy Environment 

Why in News ?

  • Recurring winter smog in Delhi–NCR with severe AQI levels has revived debate on whether the right to a clean and healthy environment should be explicitly constitutionalised.
  • Existing protection relies largely on judicial interpretation of Article 21, not an express fundamental right.
  • Raises questions of state responsibility, enforceability, and environmental federalism.

Relevance

GS II (Polity & Governance)

  • Article 21 expansion
  • Directive Principles vs Fundamental Rights
  • Judicial activism

GS III (Environment)

  • Air pollution
  • Environmental governance
  • Climate change law

The Problem Context: Air Pollution as a Rights Issue

A. DelhiNCR Air Quality Reality

  • Winter AQI frequently enters Severe” (401–500) or Severe+” category.
  • PM2.5 concentrations often exceed:
    • WHO guideline: 5 µg/m³ (annual)
    • Delhi winter peaks: 150–300 µg/m³ (30–60× WHO limit).
  • Health impacts:
    • Stroke, ischemic heart disease, lung cancer, COPD.
    • Children disproportionately affected due to lung development.

B. Major Sources of Pollution

  • Fossil fuel combustion (power plants, vehicles)
  • Transport emissions (diesel dominance)
  • Construction & demolition dust
  • Waste burning
  • Industrial emissions
  • Agricultural residue burning

 Particulate Matter (PM) is the single most lethal pollutant.

Understanding Particulate Matter (Scientific Basis)

Type Size Health Impact
PM10 ≤10 microns Enters respiratory tract
PM2.5 ≤2.5 microns Penetrates lungs, bloodstream
DPM (Diesel PM) <1 micron Neuro, cardiac, pulmonary damage
  •  
  • Diesel particulate matter (DPM) forms a sub-category of PM2.5.
  • High toxicity even at low exposure levels.
  • No safe threshold scientifically established.

Regulatory Response: GRAP & CAQM

  • Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) amended the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP).
  • Key changes:
    • Mandatory school closures under GRAP Phases 3 & 4.
    • Removal of state discretion.
    • Staggered working hours for public offices under Phase 3.
  • Significance:
    • Recognises pollution as a public health emergency, not a seasonal inconvenience.

Constitutional Evolution of Environmental Rights

A. Original Constitution

  • No explicit environmental provisions.
  • Environmental protection inferred from:
    • Natural justice
    • Welfare state philosophy
    • Directive Principles

B. Judicial Expansion via Article 21 (Right to Life)

Landmark Cases

  • Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India
    • Expanded “life” to mean life with dignity, not mere animal existence.
  • Rural Litigation and Entitlement Kendra v. State of U.P.
    • First recognition of healthy environment as part of Article 21.
  • M.C. Mehta v. Union of India (1987)
    • Explicitly held that pollution-free environment is part of the right to life.
  • Subhash Kumar v. State of Bihar
    • Read Articles 48A + 51A(g) with Article 21.
    • State has a constitutional obligation to protect air and water.

Explicit Environmental Provisions in the Constitution

A. Directive Principles

  • Article 48A:
    • State shall protect and improve the environment.
    • Emphasises compatibility of agriculture and ecology.

B. Fundamental Duties

  • Article 51A(g):
    • Duty of citizens to protect the natural environment.

 Limitation:
Neither is directly enforceable in courts like Fundamental Rights.

Judiciary as Environmental Regulator (Post-1980s)

  • Liberalisation & privatisation increased ecological stress.
  • Courts intervened using:
    • Public Interest Litigations (PILs) under Articles 32 & 226.
  • Judiciary became:
    • Environmental rule-maker
    • Environmental enforcer
    • Environmental adjudicator

Environment Protection Act, 1986

  • Section 2(a) defines environment broadly:
    • Air, water, land
    • Inter-relationship with humans, flora, fauna, microorganisms.
  • Reinforces:
    • Right to live free from disease and infection as part of dignity.

Disaster Jurisprudence & Environmental Liability

A. Absolute Liability

  • Introduced in M.C. Mehta v. Union of India (Oleum Gas Leak).
  • Key features:
    • No exceptions
    • Liability regardless of fault or negligence
  • Stronger than strict liability.

B. Core Environmental Principles

Precautionary Principle

  • Explained in Vellore Citizens’ Welfare Forum v. Union of India.
  • Lack of scientific certainty cannot delay preventive action.
  • Part of Indian law.

Polluter Pays Principle

  • Polluters must:
    • Bear cost of remediation
    • Compensate for environmental harm
  • Shifts burden from state to violators.

Public Trust Doctrine

  • Explained in M.C. Mehta v. Kamal Nath.
  • State acts as trustee of natural resources.
  • Cannot transfer or exploit for private gain.

Constitutional Anchors

  • Article 39(b): Community ownership of material resources.
  • Article 39(c): Prevent concentration of means of production.
  • Reinforced in Radhey Shyam Sahu v. State of U.P..

Climate Change as a Fundamental Rights Issue

  • M.K. Ranjitsinh v. Union of India:
    • Recognised:
      • Right against adverse effects of climate change
      • Linked to Article 21 (life) and Article 14 (equality)

 Expands environmental rights into climate justice.

The Core Gap: Why Judicial Recognition Is Not Enough

  • Judicially evolved rights:
    • Cannot be directly claimed unless tied to Part III.
  • State compliance remains:
    • Episodic
    • Reactive
    • Crisis-driven
  • Environmental governance becomes court-centric, not institution-centric.

The Case for Explicit Constitutional Right

Why Needed

  • Makes:
    • Clean air & water justiciable by default
    • State & citizens equally accountable
  • Reduces over-dependence on PILs.
  • Aligns India with:
    • UN Human Rights Council recognition of clean environment as a human right (2021).

Conclusion

India’s environmental protection framework rests on judicial creativity rather than constitutional clarity; making the right to a clean and healthy environment explicit is now essential for enforceability, accountability, and ecological survival.


December 2025
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