Bombay HC sets up 5-member panel on Mumbai air pollution

By IANS | Updated: November 28, 2025 18:10 IST2025-11-28T18:08:34+5:302025-11-28T18:10:13+5:30

Mumbai, Nov 28 The Bombay High Court, on Friday, constituted a five-member team, including officials from the Brihanmumbai ...

Bombay HC sets up 5-member panel on Mumbai air pollution | Bombay HC sets up 5-member panel on Mumbai air pollution

Bombay HC sets up 5-member panel on Mumbai air pollution

Mumbai, Nov 28 The Bombay High Court, on Friday, constituted a five-member team, including officials from the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC), civil society, and state pollution control agencies, to address the rising air pollution in Mumbai, especially, due to allegedly unregulated construction activities.

A bench of Chief Justice Shree Chandrashekhar and Justice Gautam Ankhad tasked the team to visit a specific area of ​​Mumbai and submit a report by December 15 on whether air pollution control guidelines were being followed at construction sites.

During the hearing, Chief Justice Chandrashekhar said that improving Mumbai's air quality may take some time.

"Delhi has been struggling for 15 years," he said, citing challenges faced by the authorities in the national capital.

The High Court appointed five-member team will include a BMC official, an employee from the Health Department and the Maharashtra Pollution Control Board (MPCB), and two members from civil society, whose names were suggested by lawyers present in court.

The bench was hearing petitions highlighting the worsening Air Quality Index (AQI) in Mumbai.

The court directed the BMC and the Maharashtra Pollution Control Board (MPCB) to submit a report by December 15, detailing the actions taken in the previous year to control air pollution.

Advocate Darius Khambata, appointed by court, said that guidelines were in place and it was just a matter of authorities effectively enforcing them.

He emphasised that there are nearly 1,000 construction sites in Mumbai, and most of them do not comply with the guidelines.

Vehicle emissions were also a major concern, he said.

However, the bench said, "Pollution caused by vehicles can be easily dealt with and everyone knows what happens on the road. We do not want to pass an order that will give them licences, they will start issuing challans, they will start seizing vehicles. Citizens should not be harassed by the order."

Advocate Janak Dwarkadas, representing an NGO, said he goes for walks near the Chief Justice's residence and sees no rules being followed at three construction sites in Walkeshwar.

The bench said, "We feel a team should survey polluting areas."

Milind Sathe, the lawyer representing the BMC, said that the corporation has 94 special squads that inspect construction sites.

The bench directed that data on the work done by the squads over the past year be preserved so that anyone can inspect it if needed, and that details be provided regarding the installation of CCTV and sensor boards at construction sites.

The bench also directed that the Health Department should issue a health advisory before the onset of autumn as an awareness programme to protect people from air pollution.

The High Court also suggested that the Maharashtra government could provide free masks to people at railway stations and bus stops.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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