City
Epaper

NGT takes cognisance of plastic bottle mandate in school; next hearing in July

By IANS | Updated: April 3, 2026 11:20 IST

New Delhi, April 3 The National Green Tribunal has granted time to authorities and a private school in ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 3 The National Green Tribunal has granted time to authorities and a private school in Central Delhi to file their responses in a suo motu case concerning a ban on metal water bottles and the alleged health risks of plastic usage among students.

A Bench headed by Chairperson Justice Prakash Shrivastava, and comprising Expert Member Dr Afroz Ahmad, was hearing the matter initiated on the basis of a news report titled “Parents object to metal water bottle ban at private school” published on January 18.

In the latest proceedings, counsel for the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) submitted that its reply had been filed, following which the green tribunal directed the registry to examine and place it on record if found defect-free.

The counsel of the Directorate of Education, Delhi government, appearing virtually, sought six weeks’ time to file a response, which was allowed by the Justice Shrivastava-led Bench.

Taking note of the incomplete service of notice on the Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC), the NGT directed the registry to take fresh steps to ensure service. On a request made during the hearing, the green tribunal impleaded Raghubir Singh Junior Modern School, Humayun Road, as a party to the proceedings.

“R.S. Junior Modern School through Principal… is impleaded as respondent,” the Justice Shrivastava-led Bench ordered, while recording that counsel appearing for the school accepted notice and sought time to file a reply.

It also directed the office to prepare an amended memo of parties reflecting the addition of the school as a respondent.

The matter has been listed for further hearing on July 8.

Earlier, the NGT had taken suo motu cognisance of the issue, observing that the reported policy of allowing only plastic water bottles in the school raises serious health and environmental concerns.

“The plastic bottles leach out microplastics, which have an adverse impact on health… such an approach of schools would be detrimental to the young children,” the green tribunal had observed in its January 20 order.

It had further noted that the issue attracts provisions of the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974, and the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, and raises substantial questions relating to compliance with environmental norms.

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

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalRising disappearances in Sindh draw international attention as protest held outside International Court of Justice

Entertainment'Panchayat' makers kick off shooting for new season

BusinessBajaj Finance Extends Personal Loan Tenure up to 108 Months, Easing Repayment Burden

BusinessRethinking Talent and AI in HR: Insights from SRIF HR Summit 2026

NationalSeer praises relocation of meat shops ahead of Ardh Kumbh in Haridwar, calls it essential for spiritual sanctity

National Realted Stories

NationalNorth East Delhi riots case: Court acquits 9 accused of rioting, giving them benefit of doubts

National'Jo dar gaya, woh...': AAP rift wide open, Kejriwal's 'soldiers' hit back at Raghav Chadha with 'soft PR' jibe

National'Only about Arvind Kejriwal': BJP leaders attack AAP over RS deputy leader row

NationalChhattisgarh High Court convicts Ramavatar Jaggi murder main accused Amit Jogi

NationalTop Maoist leader Prashant Bose alias ‘Kishan da’ dies in custody in Ranchi