National Environment Policy 2004
National Environment Policy 2004
National Environment Policy 2004
1. Preamble
A diverse developing society such as ours provides numerous challenges in
the economic, social, political, cultural, and environmental arenas. All of
these coalesce in the dominant imperative of alleviation of mass poverty,
reckoned in the multiple dimensions of livelihood security, health care,
education, empowerment of the disadvantaged, and elimination of gender
disparities.
This dynamic requires an evolving and flexible policy framework with a built
in system for monitoring and review, and where necessary, revision.
Sustainable development concerns in the sense of enhancement of human
well-being , broadly conceived, 2 are a recurring theme in India’s development
philosophy. For this to occur, there is a need for balance and harmony
between economic, social and environmental needs of the country.3 India
also plays an important role in several significant international initiatives
concerned with the environment. It is a party to the key multilateral
agreements, and recognises the interdependencies among, and
transboundary character of, several environmental problems.
1 The “Environment” comprises all entities, natural or manmade, external to oneself, which
provide value, now or perhaps in the future, to humankind. Environmental concerns relate to
their degradation through actions of humans.
2 The present day consensus reflects three foundational aspirations. First, that human beings
should be able to enjoy a decent quality of life; second, that humanity should become capable of
respecting the finiteness of the biosphere; and third, that neither the aspiration for the good life,
nor the recognition of biophysical limits should preclude the search for greater justice in the
world.
3 See Tenth Five Year plan 2002-2007, Volume II, Chapter 1.
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The NEP, 2004 has been motivated by the above considerations and is
intended to mainstream environmental concerns in all development
activities. It briefly describes the key environmental challenges currently and
prospectively facing the country, the objectives of environment policy,
normative principles underlying policy action, strategic themes for
intervention, broad indications of the legislative and institutional development
needed to accomplish the strategic themes, and mechanisms for
implementation and review. It has been prepared through a process of
extensive consultation with experts, as well as diverse stakeholders, and this
process is also documented.
4 Resilience is the capacity of an ecosystem to recover from shocks, and surprises, whether
manmade or natural. If a system loses resilience, it may be rapidly transformed to a wholly
different (and unwelcome) state when subjected to even a temporary perturbation.
5 For example, as money for medical treatment is preferentially allocated within households
towards treatment of the wage-earning men folk.
6 Which may relate to both formal institutions such as legal rights over resources, and traditional,
informal institutions, such as community norms of resource management.
5
Policy failures can emerge from various sources, including the use of fiscal
instruments, such as explicit and implicit subsidies for the use of various
resources, which provide incentives for excessive use of natural resources.
Inappropriate policy can also lead to changes in commonly managed
systems, with adverse environmental outcomes.
7 Hughes et. al. 2001: Environmental health in India: Priorities in Andhra Pradesh, Environment
and Social Development Unit, South Asia Region, World Bank .
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resources must proceed only on the basis of equal sharing per-capita across
all countries.
4. Principles
The above objectives are to be realized through various strategic
interventions by different public authorities at Central, State, and Local
Government levels. They would also be the basis of partnerships between
public agencies, local communities, and various economic actors. However,
these strategic interventions, besides legislation and the evolution of legal
doctrines for realization of the objectives, need to be premised on a core set
of unambiguously stated principles. The following principles, accordingly,
would guide the activities of different actors in relation to this policy. Each of
these principles has an established genealogy in policy pronouncements,
jurisprudence, international environmental law, or international State
practice:
v. Economic Efficiency:
In various public actions for environmental conservation, economic efficiency
would be sought to be realized.8
vii. Equity:
The cardinal principle of equity or justice requires that human beings cannot
be treated differently based on irrelevant differences between them. Equity
norms must be distinguished according to context, i.e. “procedural equity”,
relating to fair rules for allocation of entitlements and obligations, and “end-
result equity”, relating to fair outcomes in terms of distribution of entitlements
and obligations. Each context, in addition, must be distinguished in terms of
“intra-generational equity”, relating to justice within societies and in particular
providing space for the participation of underprivileged men and women, and
“inter-generational equity”, relating to justice between generations.
Equity, in the context of this policy refers to both equity in entitlements to,
and participation of the relevant publics in processes of decision-making
over use of, environmental resources.
b) Strict liability
Strict liability imposes an obligation to compensate the victim for harm
resulting from actions or failure to take action, which may not necessarily
constitute a breach of any law or duty of care. 11
x. Decentralisation:
Decentralization involves ceding or transfer of power from a Central
Authority to State and Local Authorities, in order to empower public
authorities having jurisdiction at the spatial level at which particular
environmental issues are salient, to address these issues.
xi. Integration:
Integration refers to the inclusion of environmental considerations in sectoral
policymaking, the integration of the social and natural sciences in
environment related policy research, and the strengthening of relevant
linkages among various agencies at the Central, State, and Local Self-
Government, charged with the implementation of environmental policies.
11 In terms of the Supreme Court’s decisions in Shriram Gas Leak case and the Bhopal gas leak
case, strict liability applies whenever the liable party damages a third party.
10
(i) Approach :
The recommendations of the Committee on Reforming Investment Approval
& Implementation Procedures (The Govindarajan Committee identified
delays in environment and forest clearances as the largest source of
delays in development projects - Appendix I), will be followed for
reviewing the e xisting procedures for granting clearances and other
approvals under various statutes and rules. These include the Environment
Protection Act, Forest Conservation Act, the Water (Prevention and Control
of Pollution) Act, the Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act and
Wildlife (Protection) Act, and Genetic Engineering Approval Committee
(GEAC) Rules under the Environment Protection Act. The objective is to
reduc e delays and levels of decision-making, realiz e decentralization of
environmental functions, and ensure greater transparency and
accountability.
Civil law , on the other hand, offers flexibility, and its sanctions can be more
effectively tailored to particular situations. The evidentiary burdens of civil
proceedings are less daunting than those of criminal law. It also allows for
12
Accordingly, a judicious mix of civil and criminal processes and sanctions will
be employed in the legal regime for enforcement, through a review of the
existing legislation. Civil liability law, civil sanctions , and processes would
govern most situ ations of non-compliance. Criminal processes and sanctions
would be available for serious, and potentially provable, infringements of
environmental law, and their initiation would be vested in responsible
authorities . Recourse may also be had to the relevant provisions in the
Indian Penal Code, and the Criminal Procedure Code.
b) Give due consideration, to the quality and productivity of lands which are
proposed to be converted for development activities, as part of the clearance
process. Projects involving large-scale diversion of prime agricultural land
would require environmental clearance whether or not the proposed activity
otherwise requires environmental clearance.
a) Review the regulatory processes for LMOs so that all relevant scientific
knowledge is taken into account, and ecological, health , and economic
concerns are adequately addressed.
12 In general, Genetically Modified Organisms require evaluation of their potential benefits and
harms as part of relevant regulatory processes. The subset of LMOs, may, however, owing t0
their potential for replication, involve environmental concerns.
14
(i) Forests:
Forests provide a multiplicity of environmental services. Foremost among
these is the recharging of mountain aquifers, which sustain our rivers. They
also conserve the soil, and prevent floods and drought. They provide habitat
for wildlife and the ecological conditions for maintenance and natural
evolution of genetic diversity of flora and fauna. They are the traditional
homes of forest dwelling tribals, the major part by far of whose livelihoods
depend on forests. They yield timber, fuel-wood, and other forest produce,
and possess immense potential for economic benefits, in particular for local
communities, from sustainable eco-tourism.
On the other hand, in recent decades, there has been significant loss of
forest cover, although there are now tangible signs of reversal of this trend.
The principal direct cause of forest loss has been the conversion of forests
for agriculture, settlements, infrastructure, and industry. In addition,
commercial extraction of fuel-wood, illegal felling, and grazing of cattle, has
degraded forests. These causes, however, have their origins in the fact that
17
The National Forest Policy, 1988, and the Indian Forest Act, as well as the
regulations under it, provide a comprehensive basis for forest conservation.
However, it is necessary, looking to some of the underlying causes of forest
loss, to take some further steps. These include:
(ii) Wildlife:
The status of wildlife in a region is an accurate index of the state of
ecological resources, and thus of the natural resource base of human well
being. This is because of the interdependent nature of ecological entities
(“the web of life”) , in which wildlife is a vital link. 13 Moreover, several
charismatic species of wildlife embody “Incomparable Values”, and at the
same time, are a major resource base for sustainable eco-tourism.
13 For example, the presence of predators (“tigers”) indicates that the prey base (“deer”) is sound, in
turn indicating that the vegetative cover (“grass”) is healthy, for which the conservation of soil,
water, and absence of pollution is essential. The last indicate conditions conducive to human
health and livelihoods.
14 Protected Areas may include forest as well as non-forest ecosystems, e.g. deserts, marine
sanctuaries, etc.
19
15 For example, in institutions such as Botanical Survey of India (BSI), the Zoological Survey of
India (ZSI), the Bombay Natura l History Society (BNHS), and others.
20
The broad direct causes of rivers degradation are, in turn, linked to several
policies and regulatory regimes. These include tariff policies for irrigation
systems and industrial use, which, through inadequate cost-recovery,
provide incentives for overuse near the headwork’s of irrigation systems, and
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b) Consider and mitigate the impacts on river flora and fauna, and the
resulting change in the resource base for livelihoods, of multipurpose river
valley projects, power plants, and industries.
(ii) Groundwater:
Groundwater is present in underground aquifers in many parts of the
country. Aquifers near the surface are subject to annual recharge from
precipitation, but the rate of recharge is impacted by human interference.
Deep aquifers, on the other hand, occur below a substratum of hard rock.
The deep aquifers generally contain very pure water, but since they are
recharged only over many millennia, must be conserved for use only in
periods of calamitous drought such as may happen only once in several
hundred years. The boundaries of groundwater aquifers do not generally
correspond to the spatial jurisdiction of any local public authorities or private
holdings, nor are they easily discernable, nor can withdrawals be easily
monitored, leading to the unavoidable situation of groundwater being an
open access resource.
The water table has been falling rapidly in many areas of the country in
recent decades. This is largely due to withdrawal for agricultural, industrial,
and urban use, in excess of annual recharge. In urban areas, apart from
withdrawals for domestic and industrial use, housing and infrastructure such
22
The direct causes of groundwater depletion have their origin in the pricing
policies for electricity and diesel. In the case of electricity, where individual
metering is not practiced, a flat charge for electricity connections makes the
marginal cost of electricity effectively zero. Subsidies for diesel also reduce
the marginal cost of extraction to well below the efficient level. Given the fact
that groundwater is an open access resource, the user then “rationally” (i.e.
in terms of his individual perspective), extracts groundwater until the
marginal value to him equals his now very low marginal cost of extraction.16
The result is inefficient withdrawals of groundwater by all users, leading to
the situation of falling water tables. Support prices for several water intensive
crops with implicit price subsidies aggravate this outcome by strengthening
incentives to take up these crops rather than less water intensive ones.
Falling water tables have several perverse social impacts, apart from the
likelihood of mining of deep aquifers, “the drinking water source of last
resort”. The capital costs of pump sets and bore wells for groundwater
extraction when water tables are very deep may be relatively high, with no
assurance that water would actually be found. In such a situation, a user
who may be a marginal farmer able to borrow the money only at usurious
rates of interest, may, in case water is not found, find it impossible to repay
his debts. This may lead to destitution, or worse. Even if the impacts were
not so dire, there would be excessive use of electricity and diesel.
The efficient use of groundwater would, accordingly, require that the practice
of non-metering of electric supply to farmers be discontinued in their own
enlightened self-interest. It would also be essential to progressively ensure
that the environmental impacts are taken into account in setting electricity
tariffs, and diesel pricing.
16 The marginal cost of extraction equals the marginal cost to the farmer of power (“zero”) or
diesel, and a small labour and depreciation cost. The capital cost of a bore well as well as the flat
rate connection charge are sunk costs and do not count in the marginal cost of water.
23
(ii) Wetlands:
Wetlands, natural and manmade, freshwater or brackish, provide numerous
ecological services. They provide habitat to aquatic flora and fauna, as well
as numerous species of birds, including migratory species. The density of
birds, in particular, is an accurate indication of the ecological health of a
particular wetland. Several wetlands have sufficiently unique ecological
character as to merit international recognition as Ramsar Sites.17
Wetlands als o provide freshwater for agricultural and domestic use, help
groundwater recharge, and provide livelihoods to fisher-folk. They may also
comprise an important resource for sustainable tourism and recreation.18
They may be employed as an alternative to power, technology, and capital
intensive municipal sewage plants; however, if used for this purpose without
proper reckoning of their assimilative capacity, or for dumping of solid and
hazardous waste, they may become severely polluted, leading to adverse
health impacts. The inadvertent introduction of some alien species of flora in
wetlands19 have also degraded their ecology.
17 For example, the Chilka Lake and the East Kolkata Wetlands.
18 For example, the Dal Lake (Srinagar), the Otacamund Lake, and the Nainital Lake.
19 e.g. Water Hyacinth.
24
Wetlands are under threat from drainage and conversion for agriculture and
human settlements, besides pollution. This happens because pu blic
authorities or individuals having jurisdiction over wetlands derive little
revenues from them, while the alternative use may result in windfall financial
gains to them. However, in many cases, the economic values of wetlands’
environmental services may significantly exceed the value from alternative
use. On the other hand, the reduction in economic value of their
environmental services due to pollution, as well as the health costs of the
pollution itself, are not taken into account while using them as a waste dump.
There also does not yet exist a formal system of wetland regulation outside
the international commitments made in respect of Ramsar sites.
The direct causes of air pollution are emissions from the use of fossil energy,
and other industrial processes, and some consumption activities.22 The
deeper causes arise in a multiplicity of policy, and institutional, including
regulatory shortcomings, in particular, inefficient pricing of fossil fuel based
energy. Indoor air pollution, a special case, arises from the low societal
status of women, leading to continued use of polluting, inefficient biomass
stoves, besides pricing policies for agricultural chemicals which lead to
c) Prepare and implement action plans for major cities for addressing air
pollution for both point and non-point sources, relying on a judicious
combination of fiats and incentive based instruments.
c) Enhance capacities for spatial planning among the State and Local
Governments, with adequate participation by local communities, to ensure
clustering of polluting industries to facilitate setting up of common effluent
treatment plants to be operated on cost recovery basis.
d) Give legal recognition to, and strengthen the informal sector systems
of collection and recycling of various materials ; in particular enhance their
access to institutional finance and relevant technologies.
23 There is considerable evidence of consumer preference for organic produce, which thereby may
command a substantial premium.
29
India’s GHG emissions at 1994 level were 1228 million ton (Mt) CO 2
equivalent (India’s initial National Communication to UNFCCC 2004), which
is below 3% of global GHG emissions. In per-capita terms, it is 23 per cent
of the global average, and 4 per cent of USA, 8 per cent of Germany, 9 per
cent of UK and 10 per cent of Japan per capita emissions in 1994. In terms
of the GHG intensity of the economy, in Purchasing Power Parity terms,
India emitted a little above 0.4 tonne CO2 equivalent per 1000 US dollars in
2002, which is lo wer than those of the USA and the global average. In terms
of primary energy use, India’s share of renewable energy (being a non –
GHG emitting energy form) at 36 per cent is far higher than industrialized
countries can hope to reach in many decades. Since GHGs emissions are
directly linked to economic activity, India’s economic growth will necessarily
involve increase in GHGs emissions from the current extremely low levels.
Any constraints on the emissions of GHGs by India, whether direct, by way
of emissions targets, or indirect, will reduce growth rates.
24 Environmental quality is not the only source of societal risk; virtually every activity of humans is
fraught with risk. Other sources of risk, which may be regulated, include safety standards for
vehicles, aircraft, water, food and pharma, contagious diseases (quarantine and
immunizations), etc. Risk mitigation in each case involves societal costs; these must be weighed
against the potential benefits
32
28 Even firms which sell only part of their output to Government may be expected to obtain ISO
14000 certification, since it would not be cost-effective for them to maintain separate production
lines for certified and non-certified products.
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themselves, rather than treating the waste after generation. In general, clean
technologies are less intensive in use of raw materials and energy, than
c onventional technologies, which rely on pollution abatement after
generation. For this reason, they may also offer significant cost advantages
to the producer.
Barriers to the adoption of clean technologies are, first, the fact that many of
them are proprietary, and protected by strong patent regimes held abroad.
The vendors, accordingly, would be able to extract large premiums in the
absence of competitive substitutes. Second, lack of capacity in development
financial institutions for appraisal of proposals for switching existing
production facilities to clean technologies. Third, the lack of coordination in
R&D efforts in India aimed at developing a shelf of commercially viable clean
technologies. The last should also be viewed against the fact that in future,
almost all commercial transfers of production technology worldwide may be
for clean technologies.
are realized through, and are carried out in terms of the principles of good
governance, in particular, transparency, accountability, cost effectiveness,
and efficiency.
The following provisions are, accordingly made for review, updating, and
renewal of NEP 2004:
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