Hindustan Times (Noida)

1,900 brick kilns may run in NCR as top court eases green body’s curbs

- Abraham Thomas abraham.thomas@hindustant­imes.com

NGT ORDER CAME ON A PETITION FILED BY A CITIZEN WHO SOUGHT A BAN ON ALL BRICK KILNS, INCLUDING THOSE OPERATING ON ZIG-ZAG TECHNOLOGY

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court has removed the strict condition imposed by the National Green Tribunal requiring brick kilns to operate only on piped natural gas (PNG), paving the way for the reopening of nearly 1,900 kilns in the national capital region (NCR) that were closed due to an interim ban imposed by the tribunal in November 2019.

Balancing the competing interests of the environmen­t and the brick manufactur­ers and their dependent employees, the Supreme Court allowed operation of the brick kilns subject to a February 22, 2022 notificati­on issued by the Centre. The notificati­on permitted all existing brick kilns to shift to PNG within a year, thus allowing kilns fired by coal, firewood to remain in operation till the deadline.

The order passed on April 8 by a bench of justices KM Joseph and Hrishikesh Roy said, “We make it clear that those out of 2,164 units, which have not obtained consent to operate (under the February 22 notificati­on) and those units which have not declared their production capacity, shall not be permitted to operate.”

The court directed the kilns to first obtain consent under the February notificati­on issued by the Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change (MOEFCC) and disclose their production capacity. The notificati­on also required the kilns to shift to zig-zag technology (where bricks are stacked in zig zag manner) within the one-year period as this method of producing bricks causes less air pollution.

The brick kiln associatio­ns situated in Haryana and Uttar Pradesh,

operating on zig-zag technology, had approached the top court to appeal against the NGT judgment of February 17, 2021 as it restrained the brick-makers operating on other fuels such as coal, firewood, and permitted only 644 units (444 in Haryana and 200 in UP) to remain operationa­l during the months of March-june every year.

This is the peak period for this industry as in the winter months the air quality index (AQI) in Delhi-ncr dips to “severe” category “(AQI of 401-500), requiring these units to be shut down as per the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP).

The judges observed, “The following order is required to be passed keeping in view, undoubtedl­y, the interest of the environmen­t, and factoring in both the interests of the persons who are running the brick kiln industry and the employees who would be working therein.”

The NGT order came on a petition filed by a citizen, Utkarsh Panwar, who sought ban on all brick kilns, including those operating on zig-zag technology. NGT had on November 15, 2019 issued an interim order staying the operation of all brick kilns and kept extending the ban till its final order passed in February 2021. Brick kiln owners operating on coal, firewood, etc, felt severely handicappe­d by the NGT’S direction to switch to PNG.

This aspect was taken care of by the MOEFCC notificati­on which said, “All brick kilns shall use only approved fuel such as PNG, coal, fire wood and/or agricultur­al residues. Use of pet coke, tyres, plastic, hazardous waste shall not be allowed in brick kilns.”

The central pollution control board (CPCB) through its lawyer Swarupama Chaturvedi had produced the February notificati­on before the court and stated that the board was open to allow the brick kilns as per this notificati­on.

Panwar, the petitioner before NGT, pointed out to the court that of the 2,164 units which were in focus, about 115 did not have the consent to operate as per the MOEFCC notificati­on while 221 units had not declared their production capacity.

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