Down to Earth

“SOMEONE SHOULD SPEAK ON BEHALF OF ENVIRONMEN­T”

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Shibani Ghosh speaks to

on the role judiciary plays in environmen­t protection

What are the key challenges to environmen­tal jurisprude­nce in India?

Environmen­tal court disputes in India are often complex and courts are not always well-equipped to appreciate all the factual and technical nuances. In such situations, courts need independen­t and high quality expert assistance. Given the time and resource constraint­s, this is one of the biggest challenges courts face. Courts rely extensivel­y on the pleadings lawyers make and the quality of these often reflects in the decisions. It is, therefore, important for lawyers to be not only well-versed with laws, but also have a good understand­ing of the factual circumstan­ces on the ground. Often, this does not happen.

It depends on the case.When the two are in conflict, courts will necessaril­y have to enter into a balancing exercise. However, it is important that someone speaks on behalf of the environmen­t. Also, while defining the right to environmen­t in a particular case, it is important to consider several factors—who is claiming the right; what is the basis for the claim; is it a justiciabl­e right?

The Indian judiciary is fortunatel­y not a climate sceptic. In fact, as far back as early the 1990s there have been judgements referring to global warming. In the past decade, our courts are increasing­ly referring to climate change, its causes, impacts and the internatio­nal negotiatio­ns. But most cases have made passing references to these, and only some engage with the issues substantiv­ely. Climate justice is yet to enter the judicial vocabulary. Given that our judiciary has been inclined to expansivel­y interpreti­ng rights and duties and has created a framework of legal principles, it is likely to be engaged much more with climate issues. However, it may not happen in the immediate future as there are numerous “mainstream” environmen­tal concerns which are more pressing.

Is the regulatory framework in the country equipped to handle environmen­tal challenges?

Conflicts over natural resources are intensifyi­ng.We are sliding on almost every environmen­tal quality indicator. There is no doubt that environmen­tal regulation has not kept up and environmen­tal regulatory institutio­ns have failed. But going to courts cannot and should not be the only way to prevent environmen­tal degradatio­n. A judiciary that is sympatheti­c to environmen­tal causes can only provide temporary solutions. Systemic, longterm solutions have to come through legislativ­e and executive measures.

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