Context:
Recent investigations have highlighted institutional and expertise gaps within the National Green Tribunal (NGT), raising concerns about its ability to effectively adjudicate complex environmental disputes and development-related cases.
Key Highlights:
- Role and Purpose of NGT
- Established in 2010 under the National Green Tribunal Act to provide specialized environmental justice.
- Designed to combine legal expertise with scientific and ecological knowledge.
- Trends in Tribunal Decisions
- An investigation found that between 2020 and 2025, the NGT ruled in favor of project developers in four out of five cases.
- Conflict of Interest Concerns
- Nine out of thirteen expert members appointed since 2016 previously served in senior roles in the Environment Ministry.
- This raises concerns about possible bias or conflict of interest.
- Vacancies and Institutional Weakness
- The NGT Act mandates equal numbers of judicial and expert members, but many expert positions remain unfilled.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- National Green Tribunal (NGT)
- Established under the NGT Act, 2010.
- Aims for expeditious disposal of environmental cases and enforcement of environmental laws.
- Has principal bench in New Delhi and regional benches across India.
- Composition of NGT
- Includes Judicial Members (judges) and Expert Members with scientific or technical expertise.
- Requires multidisciplinary expertise in environmental governance.
- Environmental Governance
- Framework of laws, policies, and institutions that regulate environmental protection and sustainable development.
- Conflict of Interest
- Situation where personal or institutional interests may influence decision-making.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Importance of Technical Expertise in Environmental Adjudication
- Environmental disputes often involve:
- Scientific data analysis
- Ecological impact assessments
- Climate risk modelling
- Effective adjudication requires multidisciplinary expertise beyond legal interpretation.
- Institutional Challenges Facing the NGT
- Vacancies among expert members weaken decision-making capacity.
- Limited diversity of expertise, with many members from Indian Forest Service backgrounds.
- Increasing Complexity of Environmental Governance
- Issues such as climate change, biodiversity loss, pollution control, and infrastructure development require advanced scientific knowledge.
- Lack of specialized expertise can compromise environmental justice and regulatory credibility.
- Need for Stronger Institutional Independence
- Avoid potential conflicts of interest in appointments.
- Ensure transparent and merit-based selection of expert members.
- Way Forward
- Fill vacant expert positions in the tribunal.
- Expand recruitment to include scientists, economists, engineers, urban planners, and environmental policy experts.
- Strengthen capacity-building and technical advisory mechanisms within the tribunal.
- Improve implementation and monitoring of NGT decisions.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS Paper II – Governance: Institutional effectiveness and judicial accountability.
• GS Paper III – Environment & Ecology: Environmental governance and regulatory institutions.
