Energy & Environment
Environmental
Legislation Concerning Fertiliser Industry
Although provisions for environmental regulation and legal action have existed in India for some time in the form of the Factories Act and the Indian Forests Act, rapid industrialization and urbanization found these Acts to be inadequate. It was, therefore, necessary to have a uniform national law covering broad environmental problems endangering the health and safety of people as well as the protection of flora and fauna. Consequently, India, which participated in the 1972 United Nations’ Stockholm Conference on Human Environment, decided to implement the decisions of the Conference related to pollution, preservation, and protection of the environment.
Pollution control to preserve the
environment is universally practiced mainly
through the development of environmental
protection standards, their implementation,
and taking legal action against violators.
The environmental protection standards are
essential to ensure that the pollutants
discharged from the industry into the
environment are within the capacity of the
environment to assimilate them through
natural purification processes.
In
India, the first organization that attended
to the need for developing and promoting
standards for environmental protection was
the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS). The
BIS laid down environmental protection (EP)
standards even before any legislation in
this regard was conceived. However, the BIS
standards are only recommendations and are
not legally binding.
The
first legislation came into existence in
1974 specifically to protect the water
component of the environment. This
legislation, referred to as the Water
(Pollution Prevention and Control) Act, was
followed in 1981 by the Air (Pollution
Prevention and Control) Act. The
Environment (Protection) Act of 1986, an
umbrella Act covers all facets of the
environment, which the Public Liability
Insurance Act of 1991 has been designed to
provide immediate relief to the person(s)
affected by accidents occurring while
handling hazardous substances. A discussion
of these Acts follows. |
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