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Pipavav case: Supreme Court urged to reaffirm environmental rule of law

By A Representative 
Lawyers and legal professionals from across India have issued a collective appeal to the Chief Justice of India, warning that recent judicial remarks risk undermining decades of constitutional environmental jurisprudence. In an open letter dated May 21, 2026, more than 70 signatories affiliated with the National Alliance for Justice, Accountability and Rights (NAJAR) expressed concern over observations made during proceedings on the expansion of Gujarat’s Pipavav Port
The Supreme Court had declined to review the National Green Tribunal’s clearance of the project, while noting that environmental objections often serve as “routine impediments to development.”  
The letter argues that such remarks mark a troubling departure from the Court’s established role in safeguarding ecological rights. The signatories contend that the shift reframes environmental litigation from a constitutional safeguard into a suspect form of obstruction, recasts citizens as “so-called activists” rather than enforcers of statutory duties, and reduces judicial scrutiny of clearances in favor of administrative deference. 
They warn that this undermines the statutory design of the National Green Tribunal Act, 2010, and erodes the participatory ethos embedded in Indian public law.  
The appeal situates itself within a broader history of environmental jurisprudence in India. Since the 1980s, the Supreme Court has expanded the scope of Articles 14, 19 and 21 to include environmental rights, linking ecological stability to dignity, livelihood and equality. 
Landmark rulings on pollution, forest conservation and climate impacts have treated environmental protection as part of constitutional governance. The lawyers argue that the Pipavav remarks risk reversing this trajectory at a time when ecological degradation and climate pressures demand stronger judicial oversight.  
NAJAR’s members stress that they are not calling for a halt to development projects pursued with due regard to law and sustainability. Instead, they urge the Court to reaffirm constitutional environmentalism, recognizing environmental PILs and appeals as legitimate enforcement actions, treating citizens invoking environmental statutes as fulfilling constitutional duties under Articles 48A and 51A(g), and ensuring that NGT decisions remain subject to meaningful appellate review. 
They call for judicial consideration of development to remain anchored in the Preamble and fundamental rights, so that infrastructure and investment do not eclipse ecological justice, dignity and livelihoods.  
The letter underscores the symbolic authority of the Supreme Court in environmental matters. For decades, its credibility has rested on legality, transparency and care for the natural world as constitutional values. 
The signatories warn that eroding this foundation could weaken public trust in the judiciary’s role as guardian of rights and ecological justice. Their plea reflects a wider anxiety within civil society that the balance between development and environmental protection is tilting away from constitutional safeguards.  
This intervention highlights a critical moment in India’s governance. As large-scale projects expand and climate impacts intensify, the judiciary’s stance will shape not only legal outcomes but also the democratic ethos of participation and accountability. 
The NAJAR letter serves as a reminder that constitutional environmentalism is not an external constraint on development but a core element of India’s constitutional tradition. 

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