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Chardham Highway Project| Environmental compliance not a mere “checkbox”; Committee headed by Justice AK Sikri to oversee implementation of HPC’s recommendations: SC

Supreme Court: The 3-jude-bench of Dr. DY Chandrachud*, Surya Kant and Vikram Nath, JJ has asked the Government to make a significant alteration in the approach to Chardham Mahamarg Vikas Pariyojna by adopting sustainable measures in line with High Powered Committee’s recommendations and has said that,

“Piecemeal implementation of some mitigation measures for protection of the environment, without any concrete strategy in place, cannot pass muster.”

The Project

On 23 December 2016, the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways announced the Chardham Mahamarg Vikas Pariyojna to widen the roads of approximately 900 kms of national highways, in order to ensure safer, smoother and faster traffic movement. These highways connect the holy shrines which have been labelled as the “Chote Char Dham” in the State of Uttarakhand – Yamunotri (NH94/134 up to Janki Chatti), Gangotri (NH-108), Kedarnath (NH-109, up to Sonprayag), Badrinath (NH-58) and the Tanakpur-Pithoragarh stretch of the Kailash Mansarovar Yatra route (NH-125).

The Project was conceptualized with the aim of improving accessibility to these shrines by widening the existing roads, making travel safer, smoother and faster. It seeks to widen the existing highways into a double lane with paved shoulder configuration with 16 bypasses, realignments and tunnels, 15 flyovers, 101 small bridges and 3516 culverts. The MoRTH has divided the Project into 53 individual projects, the length of each project being less than 100 kms.

The Challenge

The construction under the Project was challenged on the ground that the development activity has a negative impact on the Himalayan ecosystem as it will lead to deforestation, excavation of hills and dumping of muck, which will lead to further landslides and soil erosion, in an already sensitive environment.

The Verdict

“Making the Project environmentally compliant should not be seen a “checkbox” to be obtained on the path to development, but rather as the path to sustained development itself.”

The Court allowed the MoRTH and MoD to proceed with the Project subject to the condition that it addresses all the concerns which have been raised by the HPC and the Court.

Directions

Taking note of the HPC’s unanimous recommendations for taking remedial measures, the Court has directed that,

“This Court, in its exercise of judicial review, cannot second-guess the infrastructural needs of the Armed Forces.”

Oversight Committee

An ‘Oversight Committee’, which shall report directly to the Supreme Court has also been set up to ensure implementation of the recommendations of HPC. The objective of this Oversight Committee is not to undertake an environmental analysis of the Project afresh but to assess the implementation of the recommendations already provided by the HPC

HPC versus Oversight Committee

The HPC shall continue with its work on overseeing the implementation of its recommendations for the Project, except for the national highways from Rishikesh to Mana, Rishikesh to Gangotri, and Tanakpur to Pithoragarh, which shall now fall under the purview of the Oversight Committee. This will avoid any overlap between the scope of work of the HPC and the Oversight Committee.

[Citizens for Green Doon v. Union of India, 2021 SCC OnLine SC 1243, decided on 14.12.2021]


Counsels

For Appellants: Senior Advocate Colin Gonsalves

For UOI: KK Venugopal, Attorney General for India


*Judgment by: Justice Dr. DY Chandrachud

Know Thy Judge| Justice Dr. DY Chandrachud

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