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Development and clean air are not binary choices

Hindustan Times East UP

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December 04, 2025

Last week, the Supreme Court of India handed developers a surprising reprieve in Confederation of Real Estate Developers of India (CREDAI) v. Vanashakti & Ors. 2025. In a 2:1 verdict authored by former Chief Justice of India BR Gavai and Justice K Vinod Chandran (with Justice Ujjal Bhuyan dissenting), the Court reopened the door to ex post facto environmental clearances (ECs), i.e., approvals granted to a project after construction has already begun, without the mandatory prior environmental scrutiny.

- Ashish Bharadwaj

The move is controversial not just because of what it allows, but because of what it overturns—a hard-hitting judgment from May that categorically banned the practice. In this original Vana-shakti v. Union of India ruling, a two-judge bench (comprising retired Justice Abhay S Oka and Justice Bhuyan) had struck down the Union environment, forest, and climate change ministry’s 2017 Notification and 2021 Office Memorandum allowing ex post facto ECs under strict conditions, calling the practice contrary to the principles of environmental protection.

The ruling was hailed as a progressive milestone in environmental jurisprudence, reinforcing the principle that environmental protection must come before economic gain. But shortly after, CREDAI (India’s largest association of real estate developers) filed for review with support from Union and state governments. They argued that the judgment had failed to consider precedents where the Supreme Court had approved ex post facto clearances in exceptional situations. The Court has now reopened that door.

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Hindustan Times East UP

Delhi-NCR must take the road to clean air

A four-step strategy focussed on cleaner and shared vehicles — put into action in the next few years — is critical to improving air quality

time to read

4 mins

December 10, 2025

Hindustan Times East UP

GOOGLE FACING NEW ANTITRUST INVESTIGATION IN EUROPE OVER A.I.

Google faces fresh antitrust scrutiny from European Union regulators, who opened an investigation on Tuesday into the company’s use of online content for its artificial intelligence models and services.

time to read

1 min

December 10, 2025

Hindustan Times East UP

Public health gains through vaccines need restatement

A well-known personality’s post on social media, questioning the use of vaccines and urging parents to avoid vaccinating children to reduce risks of autism, has stirred up controversy.

time to read

3 mins

December 10, 2025

Hindustan Times East UP

Beyond China’s trade gains

Its surplus of $1 trillion raises concerns about an imbalance in global trade

time to read

2 mins

December 10, 2025

Hindustan Times East UP

Why COP30’s trade turn matters, despite CBAM

It's easy to miss the paragraphs on trade, buried as they are in the procedural thicket of the UNFCCC's COP30 decision text.

time to read

3 mins

December 09, 2025

Hindustan Times East UP

India-Russia tango, with China in the shadows

If you ask an Indian whether he/she wants to go to the US/Europe or to Russia for studies, tourism, or even to settle down, the answer is not hard to guess:

time to read

4 mins

December 09, 2025

Hindustan Times East UP

Court, executive and the test of constitutionality

The separation of powers envisaged in the Constitution asks for the three organs of State to check and regulate each other. This safety mechanism is compromised when these organs start to work together, instead of reviewing each other

time to read

4 mins

December 09, 2025

Hindustan Times East UP

A safeguard for Aadhaar data

Mandating offline users of Aadhaar verification to register with UIDAI could reduce data leakage

time to read

2 mins

December 09, 2025

Hindustan Times East UP

Hindustan Times East UP

5 killed as Thai-Cambodia border clashes erupt again

Thailand launched airstrikes along the disputed border with Cambodia on Monday as both sides accused the other of breaking a ceasefire that halted fighting earlier this year.

time to read

2 mins

December 09, 2025

Hindustan Times East UP

Chernobyl’s damaged shield leaking: IAEA

A protective shield at the Chernobyl nuclear plant in war-torn Ukraine, built to contain radioactive material from the 1986 disaster, can no longer perform its main safety function due to drone damage, the UN nuclear watchdog said on Friday, a strike Ukraine has attributed to Russia.

time to read

1 min

December 07, 2025

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