
CASE IN NEWSSupreme Court Recalls Vanashakti Ruling on Clearances after majority finds earlier bar on post-facto EC legally flawed . |
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CASE OVERVIEW
CASE NAME: Confederation of Real Estate Developers of India (CREDAI) v. Vanashakti (2025)
The Supreme Court of India revisited its May 2024 Vanashakti judgment that had prohibited post-facto Environmental Clearances (EC) . A three-judge bench led by CJI BR Gavai, with Justice Ujjal Bhuyan and Justice K Vinod Chandran, examined review pleas filed by several stakeholders . The Court found that the earlier ruling failed to consider key precedents, making it per incuriam . Justice Bhuyan, however, dissented and upheld the original view .
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KEY ASPECTS
Before listing the key issues, it is important to understand that the dispute centred on whether projects that were otherwise lawful could still obtain post-facto ECs without facing demolition . The applicants argued that the earlier ban ignored administrative realities and binding precedents .
- The original Vanashakti judgment invalidated 2017 and 2021 OMs allowing post-facto ECs .
- Several large public projects risked demolition due to the absolute prohibition .
- Core issue: Could post-facto ECs be permitted in exceptional, legally permissible situations?
- Whether the Vanashakti ruling overlooked coordinate bench precedents, making it per incuriam .
LEGAL INSIGHTS
Before examining the legal provisions, the Court analysed whether statutory powers permitted relaxation of prior-approval norms to avoid disproportionate harm . The legal framework demonstrated significant discretion vested in the Central Government .
- Section 3 & 5, Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 – empower the Central Government to issue directions and modify regulatory requirements including EC processes .
- Section 21, General Clauses Act, 1897 – authority to issue a notification inherently includes power to amend, vary or rescind it .
- Article 142, Constitution of India – allows the Supreme Court to pass orders to ensure complete justice, preventing public loss through unnecessary demolition .
- Doctrine of Per Incuriam – applied to assess whether earlier coordinate-bench precedents like Alembic (2020) and Pahwa Plastics (2023) were ignored .
COURT’S VERDICT
The majority of CJI BR Gavai and Justice K Vinod Chandran recalled the Vanashakti judgment, holding that an absolute prohibition on post-facto ECs would create wasteful demolitions, contradict statutory powers and harm public interest . They directed that the matter be placed before an appropriate bench for reconsideration . Justice Ujjal Bhuyan dissented, stating no legal error existed and that violators cannot rely on pollution-based arguments to justify unlawful constructions .
Source – Supreme Court of India
Read also – Constitution of India
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