The National Green Tribunal's 2026 dispositions have engaged a recurring pattern of environmental concerns — urban waterbody protection, infrastructure encroachment on protected ecosystems, groundwater management, and the institutional architecture for compliance with environmental clearances. A practitioner's read on the year's substantive direction, with attention to the Omaxe City pond rejuvenation directive (Lucknow), the Delhi Ridge architecture, and the NHAI / Delhi waterbody intervention.
On 28 August 1996, a three-judge Bench led by Justice Kuldip Singh held that 'sustainable development', the 'precautionary principle' and the 'polluter pays' principle are part of the law of the land — and ordered the discharge of pollution fees by tanneries in Tamil Nadu that had contaminated the River Palar and rendered 35,000 hectares of agricultural land unfit for cultivation. The judgment, together with *M.C. Mehta (Oleum Gas Leak)*, supplies the foundational architecture of Indian environmental law. A digest of the doctrines, the directions, and what they require.
Less than a year after the Bhopal disaster, an oleum gas leak from a Shriram unit in Delhi prompted the Supreme Court — through a Constitution Bench led by Bhagwati CJ — to depart from the English strict-liability framework of Rylands v. Fletcher and to formulate a doctrine of absolute liability for enterprises engaged in hazardous activities. The judgment is the doctrinal foundation of Indian environmental and industrial liability law. A digest of the rule, why the Court declined to apply Rylands, and how the doctrine continues to operate four decades on.