SC raps Panel for Air Quality Management over stubble burning
Expressing dissatisfaction over steps taken by the panel to control pollution, SC said CAQM needs to exercise its power under the Commission for Air Quality Management in National Capital Region and Adjoining Areas Act, 2021
PTI
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The top court said efforts are needed to ensure that stubble-burning alternative equipment are used at the grassroots level.
New Delhi, 27 Sept
The Supreme Court Friday rapped the Commission for Air
Quality Management (CAQM) over its failure to curb air pollution in Delhi due
to crop residue burning in the neighbouring states and said it needs to be more
active in its approach.
Expressing dissatisfaction over steps taken by the panel to
control pollution, a bench of Justice Abha S Oka and Justice Augustine George
Masih said CAQM needs to exercise its power under the Commission for Air
Quality Management in National Capital Region and Adjoining Areas Act, 2021.
"There has been total non-compliance of the Act. Please
show us a single direction issued to any stakeholder under the Act.
"We are of the view that though the commission has
taken steps, it needs to be more active. The commission must ensure that its
efforts and directions issued actually translate into reducing the problem of
pollution," the bench said.
The top court said efforts are needed to ensure that
stubble-burning alternative equipment are used at the grassroots level.
The panel must immediately step into action to ensure the
equipment provided by the Central government for avoiding stubble burning are
actually used by the farmers, it added.
The bench directed the panel to file a better compliance
report and posted the matter for hearing on October 3.
Additional Solicitor General Aishwarya Bhati, appearing for
the Centre, informed the court about the steps taken, such as issuing
advisories and guidelines, to control stubble burning.
However, the top court remarked, "It is all in the air,
nothing has been shown regarding what has been done in the National Capital
Region (NCR) states."
Chairman of the Commission for Air Quality Management for
NCT of Delhi Rajesh Verma, who was present during the hearing virtually, told
the bench that he has held meetings with the deputy commissioners of Punjab and
Haryana where incidents of stubble-burning have been reported.
The apex court on 24 September asked the Commission for Air
Quality Management in the National Capital Region and Adjoining Areas to
explain the steps being taken to curb air pollution caused by crop residue
burning.
The top court had earlier noted that stubble burning was one
of the causes for a spike in air pollution in Delhi-NCR during winters.
On 27 August, it termed the pollution control boards of
Delhi and NCR states "ineffective" due to staff shortage and asked
the body responsible for air quality management in the national capital and
adjoining areas to explain how it proposes to tackle pollution and stubble
burning which would spike with the onset of winter.
The top court had wondered how the sub-committee on
safeguarding and enforcement to be constituted by the CAQM would function due
to lack of representation from the pollution control boards of Delhi, Punjab,
Haryana, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh due to vacancies.
It directed the five NCR states to fill the vacant posts urgently,
preferably before April 30, 2025.
The top court had directed the CAQM chairperson to file an
affidavit explaining the steps the commission proposes to take to check the air
pollution menace, often attributed to the burning of paddy straw in states
adjoining the national capital.
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