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Research Article | Open Access
Volume 10 2018 | None
Air Pollution and its Legal Framework in India
Dr. S.MADHURI PARADESI
Pages: 228-235
Abstract
India has set ambient air quality standards for several pollutants. According to the rules of the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), the annex monitoring agency, the national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) should be met for at least 98 per cent of the days in a year. They may exceed the limit only for 2 per cent of the time, but not on two consecutive days of monitoring. But air-quality monitoring carried out in at least 263 cities shows that the majority do not meet standards. Further, pollution levels continue to rise in many cities, even smaller ones. According to the World Health Organization (WHO) data, 13 out of 20 of the most polluted cities are in India. The few cities that have moved forward could do so because of bottom–up pressure catalysed by public campaigns and judicial interventions. This has raised a critical question: Is the legal framework for national air-quality planning in India inadequate and so weak that it does not allow time-bound compliance with the NAAQS? In other words, there no clear operative planning framework to ensure that all regions comply with the ambient standards. Further, when a city/state exceeds norms, the reporting requirement on non-compliance with a plan of action is also absent.
Keywords
framework, government, implementation, judicial, legal, pollutants, standards
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