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What do recent changes to the environmental clearance process mean for us?

CommunitiesAndLegalAction_KanchiKohliWhile many statutes are brought into existence through legislative processes, some, such as notifications, come about through executive action that does not require legislative approval. Notifications are designed to issued and later modified and clarified through executive action alone, with public input or without. One significant notification lays out the procedure for what is popularly known as “environment clearance”. This is the Environment Impact Assessment Notification, 2006 (“the EIA notification”), which has for long been in the eye of storm in the discussions around “balancing” environment and development.

Soon after the new government took office in May 2014, it announced a series of changes to the environment and forest regulations, some of which had already been rolled out during the previous regime. Since June 2014, there have been a quick series of draft amendments, internal ministerial notes, circulars, and office memoranda bringing in important changes to the EIA notification.

Legal basis of the EIA notification

The government of India first issued this notification in 1994, exercising its power under Sections 3(1) and 3(2)(v) of The Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 (“EPA”). The latter provision gives powers to the central government to place “restriction of areas in which any industries, operations or processes or class of industries, operations or processes shall not be carried out or shall be carried out subject to certain safeguards.”

EIAnotification_fourstages_environmentalimpactassessment

Previously in this series of posts on Communities and Legal Action, I have dealt with public hearings and the steps that an affected community can take once an approval is granted for a project. Now, let us take a close look at the changes that have been made to the EIA notification and those that have been proposed. These will have a bearing on the applicability of this important piece of the regulatory structure.

They include the delegation of powers to state governments to make decisions, the creation of exceptions for project approvals, procedural relaxations, and adding new projects to the list of projects that require approval. All the circulars and changes described in this post are available here.

Projects that requiring environmental clearance – additions and clarifications

A public hearing underway for integrated facilities at the Kandla Port. Photo credit: Bharat Patel
A public hearing underway for integrated facilities at the Kandla Port. Photo credit: Bharat Patel

Some projects, such as coal tar projects, will now need to go through an “environment clearance” process, from which they had previously been exempt. Irrigation projects with a command area between 2000 and 10000 hectares will now need approval from the State Environment Impact Assessment Agency (“SEIAA”) and all irrigation projects above 10000 hectares will require approval from the Ministry of Environment, Forests, and Climate Change (“MoEFCC”), that is under Category A. Clearly, this means that all irrigation projects of capacity up to 2000 hectares of culturable command area are now exempt from an environmental clearance process, including any public consultation. River valley projects between 25 and 50 MW and with a command are between 2000 and 10000 hectares will now be appraised by the MoEFCC if the project falls in more then two states. It would have otherwise been the SEIAA’s responsibility.

Exemptions from any environmental clearance process or public consultation

A significant area of focus of the changes has been to exempt some types of projects from any environmental clearance and this has implications on sectors such as irrigation projects and coal mining projects. Coal mining projects that require a one-time capacity expansion with the production capacity exceeding 16 MTPA have for example been exempted from any public consultation (Office Memorandum dated July 28, 2014). After  clarification (Office Memorandum dated September 2, 2014) was issued, this exemption will now apply to coal mining projects with production capacity exceeding 20 MTPA, provided the ceiling of the expansion is towards mining for an additional production up to 6 MTPA and if the transportation of coal proposed is by means of a conveyor or rails. However in both these instances, the Expert Appraisal Committee has to apply “due diligence” and it needs to be subject to “satisfactory compliance with environmental clearance(s) issued in the past as judged by the EAC.”

Restricting powers for appraisal at scoping stage

InfrastructureLawAn Office Memorandum dated October 7, 2014 restricting the powers of appraisal at the scoping stage is also crucial. It indicates that the Expert Appraisal Committees (“EACs”) while reviewing the applications for environment clearance should only ask comprehensive sets of questions and studies at the time of issuing Terms of Reference for an EIA report to the project authority. The EACs review all documents related to the project including impact assessment submissions, videos recorded during the public consultation phase, and project reports and have to either recommend or reject approvals. They can ask project authorities to clarify issues, respond to queries raised at the public hearings, as well as carry out additional assessments.

With this clarification however, additional studies, especially “fresh issues”, need to be added at the appraisal stage only if the EAC can clearly justify that these are  inevitable and why they need to added at a later stage. These have to be stated unambiguously in the minutes. The purpose of this to address the complaints of project authorities that too many questions at the appraisal stage are causing delays. The very purpose of public scrutiny however, is to seek essential feedback to and address impact issues. Curtailing the powers of appraisal committees goes completely against the spirit of appraisal, which requires the EACs to do a “detailed scrutiny”.

Delegation to State Environment Impact Assessment Authority

More projects have come within the jurisdiction of the SEIAA, that is, approvals at the state level. These include all biomass-based thermal power projects and synthetic organic chemicals industries if located outside a notified industrial area or estate, with specific caveats.

The most important manner which this delegation has happened however, is by limiting the applicability of the General Condition of the EIA notification. With this change, only those Category B projects (to be approved at state level ordinarily) located within five kilometres of a national park, sanctuary, critically polluted area, ecologically sensitive area or an inter-state boundary would need to approved by MoEFCC. Prior to the amendment, this was 10 kilometres. So now, if a thermal power plant is coming up within 8 kilometres of a national park, it will only need to be appraised at the state level.

Other changes proposed to the EIA notification – linear projects, non-irrigation projects, and building and construction

Many more changes are proposed to the EIA notification but in these cases, public opinion has been sought on whether such amendments should be introduced. On September 30, 2014, a draft notification was issued proposing some critical changes, including doing away with public consultations for “all linear projects such as Highways, pipelines, etc., in border States.” It is not clear whether this includes inter-state borders.InfrastructureLaw

The draft notification also proposed the addition of non-irrigation projects such as drinking water supply projects to the purview of the EIA notification. These projects do not require environment clearance at this point of time. Projects less than 5000 hectares of submergence area have been proposed as Category B projects. Projects equal to and greater than 5000 hectares submergence area would need to be considered as Category A under the July 25, 2014 notification.

Under a September 11, 2014 draft notification, building and construction projects which cover an area greater than or equal to 20000 square metres and having a built-up area greater than1, 50,000 square metres of built-up area need approval from the SEIAA. The same goes for townships and area development projects covering an area greater than or equal to 50 hectares and or having a built-up area of greater than or equal to 1,50,000 square metres. No other building or township projects need to get environment clearance.

Catching up with the notification

The EIA notification now has to be read in line with all the clarifications and amendments, which are routinely put forward MoEFCC. It is far from easy to read the notification along with all the “ifs” and “buts” which play up when it needs to be ascertained whether an act is legal under the notification. Unraveling all of it can leave many people gasping. For affected communities, this legalese still remains distant, even as they engage with this process, counting on the hooks within the law and the support groups standing besides them and pointing their attention to it.

Kanchi Kohli (kanchikohli@gmail.com) is an independent researcher and writer.

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To police unparliamentary conduct, the Speaker only has the harsh power to suspend

Members of Parliament are not liable for anything they say in the Parliament or in any of its committees. Article 105(2) of the Constitution of India provides this shield from judicial scrutiny. With their statements subject only to the disciplinary rules of the Parliament, the good sense of the Members, and the control of proceedings by the Speaker, let us quickly look at the provisions that circumscribe a Member’s freedom of speech in Parliament.

The limits of a Member’s freedom of speech in Parliament

WelloftheHouseArticle 121 of the Constitution prohibits discussion on the conduct of any judge in the higher judiciary in the course of his duties except on a motion to present an address to the President for the removal of a judge. Rule 352 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in the Lok Sabha (“Rules of Procedure”) says that a Member shall not reflect on the conduct of persons in high authority save on a substantive motion drawn in proper terms and Rule 353 of the Rules of Procedure requires that no allegation of a defamatory or incriminatory nature shall be made by a Member unless he gives the Speaker and the Minister concerned adequate notice to such effect.

How are these fetters on a Member’s freedom of speech in Parliament enforced? As we shall see below, the Speaker has two powers: he can either expunge some types of speech or he can take the drastic step of suspending a Member.

The power of the Speaker to expunge some types of speech

Rule 380 of the Rules of Procedure allows the Speaker to order the expunction of words that he finds defamatory, indecent, unparliamentary or undignified, incriminatory, allegatory, or insinuatory against a high dignitary, authority, or organisation.

The power of the Speaker to suspend a Member

Under Rule 373, the Speaker can direct any member whose conduct is, in his opinion, grossly disorderly to withdraw immediately from the House and that Member has to absent himself during the remainder of the day’s sitting. The Speaker can also name any Member found persistently and wilfully obstructing the ordinary course of business by shouting slogans or otherwise. Under Rule 374, the Speaker shall place a motion before the House to determine whether that Member should be suspended for a period not exceeding the remainder of that session of Parliament. Under Rule 374A, that Member shall stand automatically suspended from the House for five consecutive sittings or the remainder of the session. Rule 375 allows the Speaker to suspend the sitting or adjourn the House if there is grave disorder in the house.

Thus, with no judicial scrutiny, there is no penalty that the Speaker can impose on a Member for an unwise choice of words, except the drastic step of suspension.

Kirthi Jayakumar is a Chennai-based researcher and writer.

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Law schools should evaluate internships more rigorously and intervene to limit bad choices

AbhinavSekhri_NationalLawSchoolofIndiaUniversityHaving explored different connections between practising law in India and the education provided in our law schools in previous posts, the internship stands out as the primary opportunity for law students to meaningfully interact with the real world before they graduate. It also tends to have a big influence on their decisions about the future.

Today, most major law schools make internships mandatory during vacarions and have their own internship rules. These rules will lay out where and for how long students are required to intern, and whether students are required to file reports that are then graded. Students may be required to work at different levels of the hierarchy of courts, and by the end of five years, they are expected to have been adequately exposed to the legal system.

How serious are law schools about grading internships?

Making internships mandatory reflects how important a university considers them, but the manner in which these rules are enforced belies their importance. The administration is quick to check whether the internship lasted a minimum duration and whether entries for each day have been made in the report, but not enough attention is paid to what is actually written. This is a more serious issue in institutions where the internship programme is graded, as it is in NLSIU.  There was also something quite amiss about having questions posed at us by academics about our experiences as practising advocates. The lack of any real criteria to evaluate internships meant that very few people knew how they were graded.

The rigid adherence to form also manifests itself in refusing outright, corporate internships as the rules require time to be spent in court. This ends up entirely defeating the purpose of mandatory internships for most, as they wish to gain exposure to various environments to make informed decisions about their careers. Students in turn, are forced to fudge their internship reports, which creates a lose-lose situation. By refusing to acknowledge corporatre internships, law schools turn a blind eye to the commercial realities of today where most students head for corporate jobs.

Reforms should also focus on the content of internships

lawschoolinternsPossible reforms must not only focus on the structure of the internship programme (such as expanding the time and allowing corporate internships) but also the content. Laziness cannot be the only reason for the failure to keenly evaluate internship reports. Teachers are not accustomed to the lack of uniformity either. Currently, there is a great degree of randomness associated with the internship experience, as different chambers and firms follow their own systems. Colleges could, perhaps, require the chamber or the firm to teach certain basic skills (such as drafting a contract), depending on how senior the student is. This would also ensure that students do not suffer because of the unpredictability, as can often happen at big offices. Such a step would help students make more informed decisions about their careers and also assist in objectively determining which offices are good places to intern.

Law schools should help their students make good choices

If we do believe that this current post-hoc intervention of law schools with internships is beneficial, should this be expanded to cover the pre-internship phases as well? At the moment, the entire business of securing an internship, whether at a chamber or otherwise, is left to the students. Offices usually treat students on a first-come-first-serve basis, which leads to the absurd need to secure internships for February 2016, in June 2015 itself. From what I last heard, NLSIU was trying out an internship coordinator to verify the internships taken by students, and facilitate securing internships for students who could not find one. In principle, I think the idea is sound; as long as the regulation is restricted to overseeing the process and providing information and not enforcing decisions. Currently, internship decisions are often made based on paltry information and unhelpful factors. For instance, first year law students apply to a senior advocate when all they know is a smattering of tort law, as they think a big name means a good internship. The same is not always true, and even a process to help supply that absent information can reduce faulty decision-making. I’m no fan of paternalism, but sometimes a little help doesn’t hurt.

(Abhinav Sekhri is an advocate practising in Delhi.)

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Answers to Law Biriyani 6 – Which 59-year-old tradition did Charu Khurana challenge?

Lokesh_Winner_LawBiriyani6Thank you for your enthusiastic participation in the fourth Law Biriyani, our fortnightly law quiz. Between 10:30 am yesterday and 11 am today, we received many entries where all the answers to our six questions were correct. The first person to correctly answer all six questions was K.V.S. Lokesh, a student in his second year at the NALSAR University of Law, Hyderabad. Lokesh enjoys quizzing and the travel and company that accompanies it. Recently, he has acquired a taste for cricket-related fiction. He wins Rs. 8000/- worth of discounts to do any course or certification on myLaw.net.

The answers to the sixth Law Biriyani are below.

A1. V.R. Krishna Iyer, who passed away on December 4.
A2. Bharti Shroff, the single largest holder of shares at the law firm of Amarchand & Mangaldas &  Suresh A. Shroff & Co.
A3. Ricks Club’s dancers or “strippers” were awarded USD 10.8 million in damages, as the court considered them to be employees and not independent contractors.
A4. Shamnad Basheer was awarded the Infosys Prize for his contributions to the analysis of a range of legal issues, including pharmaceutical patent injunctions and enforcement. Amartya Sen said that Basheer “has also linked up the practice of law with the theory of it in a totally remarkable and convincing way”. The prize consists of a purse of Rs. 55 lakhs, a 22 karat gold medallion, and a citation certificate for each category.
A5. Abhishek Manu Singhvi. The Income Tax Settlement Commission has levied a penalty of nearly Rs 57 crore after the Rajya Sabha MP and senior advocate failed to furnish documents supporting his claims of expenditure for running his office. Singhvi could not produce the vouchers for this period arguing that termites, which attacked his chartered accountant Mayank Gupta’s office, had chomped off the records.
A6. The practice in the Indian film industry that bars women from being classified as make-up artists. The Supreme Court bench consisting of Justices Deepak Mishra and U.U. Lalit struck down Cine Costume Make-up Artists and Hair Dressers Association (CCMAA) rules which barred women from practising as make-up artists, stating that it would not allow this “constitutionally impermissible discrimination” to continue.

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Law Biriyani 6 – What 59-year-old tradition did Charu Khurana challenge before the Supreme Court?

Law_BiriyaniWelcome a sixth time to Law Biriyani, the fortnightly offering of spice and flavour on myLaw.net. Browse the previous sets of questions, answers, and winners here. As usual, the first person to answer all six questions in the comments will receive a discount of Rs. 8000/- on any course or certification they want to do on myLaw.net. The quiz will be open up to 11 a.m. on Saturday, December 13. Make sure you leave your email address along with your answers.

Q1. [X], who was chosen for this year’s K.R. Narayanan Award for his services to the nation, holds the rare distinction of being first a Cabinet Minister in a state and later a judge of a High Court and the Supreme Court. Identify [X].

Q2. Identify the personality in the picture below.

LawBiriyani6Q2

Q3. Manhattan Federal Court Judge Paul Engelmayer recently ordered Ricks, a club in New York, to pay USD 10.8 million in damages to some people for minimum wage violations and for improperly retaining tips on the ground that they were independent contractors and not employees. Who were these people?

Q4. Professors Amartya Sen, Pradeep K. Khosla, Inder Verma, Srinivasa S. R. Varadhan, Shrinivas Kulkarni, and Kaushik Basu comprised the panel of jurors for the 2014 edition of an award. Who was the year’s winner in the humanities category?

Q5. Creatures that are classified under the infraorder Isoptera of the cockroach order Blattodea caused problems to [X] when they attacked in his chartered accountant’s office, some important documents that belonged to him. Because he was thus unable to produce these documents before the Settlement Commission, it imposed a fine on him. Name [X].

LawBiriyani6Q6Q6. Ms. Charu Khurana (pictured), was refused membership in a particular professional association even though she was a professional and trained in that field from California. She filed a writ challenging the rules of the association before the Supreme Court and the Court held that the rules of the association, which describe a 59-year-old tradition in a particular industry, was unconstitutional and illegal. What tradition? 

Law Biriyani is prepared by Walnut Knowledge Solutions (www.walnuts.co.in), a Bangalore-based organisation founded by two lawyers, Raghav Chakravarthy and Sachin Ravi, focused on quizzing and the use of knowledge-based tools for engagement, learning, and development.