Decoding air pollution concerns in Delhi-NCR

Paper: GS – III, Subject: Environment and Ecology, Topic: Pollution, Issue: Polluter Pay Principle.

Context:

Delhi-NCR continues to face severe air pollution despite judicial activism and regulatory measures. The debate has intensified over the fairness and effectiveness of blaming stubble-burning farmers, given the complex, transboundary nature of air pollution.

Key Highlights:

Core Argument: Misplaced Blame on Farmers

Delhi-NCR’s pollution stems primarily from local vehicular emissions, not seasonal stubble burning:

  • Primary Pollutant Sources: Vehicles contribute most PM2.5 and gases; stubble burning is episodic and transboundary, affecting multiple regions.
  • Narrative Flaw: Officials, agencies, citizens, and judiciary scapegoat farmers, overlooking proportionality farmers can’t bear liability for industrial/vehicular pollution (echoing EU’s Standley case, 1999, on nitrates).
  • Transboundary Reality: Pollution travels long distances (Trail Smelter, 1941; CLRTAP, 1979; ASEAN Haze Agreement, 2002).
    • PM2.5 is now recognized as long-range (Gothenburg Protocol, 2012), trade-linked health impacts exceed atmospheric transport (Zhang et al., Nature, 2017).

Polluter Pays Principle (PPP): Evolution and Challenges

PPP mandates polluters internalize environmental costs, but application falters with mixed point/non-point sources:

  • Legal Foundation in India:
Case/StatuteKey Holding
Vellore Citizens Welfare Forum vs. UOI (1996)PPP part of India’s law; led to NGT Act, 2010.
Indian Council for Enviro-Legal Action (1996)Compensation for victims/restoration over strict cost allocation.
Air (1981)/Water (1974) Acts; EPA (1986)Empower authorities for closures/directions.
Constitutional: Art. 48A, 51A(g)State duty to protect environment.
  • Proportionality Limit: Standley (ECJ, 1999) bars disproportionate burdens—e.g., farmers liable only for their nitrates, not industrial ones.
  • Complexity: Multiple sources (point: industries; non-point: agriculture/vehicles) + transboundary flows require cooperation, not solo PPP enforcement.

Shift to ‘Government-Pays Principle’:

Indian judiciary’s welfarist bent transforms PPP:

  • Judicial Approach: Focuses on corrective justice (victim compensation, restoration) over precise damage valuation. Activist courts impose monitoring/implementation costs on government.
  • Reasons:
    • Administrative lapses in pollution boards (closure powers unused effectively).
    • Victim poverty: Poor can’t sue polluters individually.
    • Welfare Priority: Courts enforce standards, obligating state spending on health/public goods.
  • Shortcomings: Doesn’t fully internalize prevention costs; ignores individual environmental duties (rights emphasized over responsibilities).

Broader Implications and Way Forward:

India’s framework prioritizes state intervention but needs refinement for equity and efficacy:

IssueCurrent PracticeSuggested Reform
Blame AttributionFarmer-centric despite vehicular dominanceData-driven source apportionment + regional cooperation.
PPP ApplicationGovernment bears costsProportional liability + precise quantification tools.
Transboundary PollutionLocal focusAdopt CLRTAP-like agreements for South Asia.
Judicial RoleActivist oversightBalance with individual duties under Art. 51A(g).

Delhi-NCR’s air pollution crisis exposes the limitations of the Polluter Pays Principle in a transboundary, multi-source context. Sustainable solutions require cooperative federalism, scientific accountability, and stronger executive capacity rather than judicially driven government-pays approaches.

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/decoding-air-pollution-concerns-in-delhi-ncr/article70440921.ece

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