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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://purl.org/purl/3094

Title: Legal Control of Industrial Pollution
Authors: Prasanna, Joseph
Dr.Leelakrishnan, P
Keywords: Industrial pollution
Types of pollutions
Human rights
Industrial policy and planning
Environment Act
Environment legislation
Issue Date: Dec-1996
Publisher: Cochin University of Science and Technology
Abstract: Industries constitute the main spring of development. Without industrial development no country could reach a stage in which a decent living for its citizens would be achieved. Increasing production to meet the basic needs of society augmented scientific invention and machine oriented industrial order.Environmental pollution ls a burning global issue. It is more serious and dangerous than terrorism. Started with the discovery of fire and development of civilization. Pollution went unnoticed throughout the centuries of human growth until its adverse effects on human environment become explicit.National concern tor environment started in our country only atter the cause of protection of environment received global attention. At present legal control ot industrial pollution is in a scattered framework of piece meal processes with overlapping provisions and authorities.Environmental protection- should be an item not only in the concurrent list of schedule 7 to the Constitution but also in the list of matters entrusted to the panchayati institutions in the Schedule 11. It is heartening to note that so far as municipalities are concerned the Constitution of India lives up to the expectation. In the wake of New Industrial Policy based on liberalisation a long list of small scale industries fall outside the purview of environmental clearance. The Indian concept of environmental im»act assessment introduced under the Environment Act by notification excludes the entire gamut of small scale industries and r.elates only to scheduled industries covered by the notifica~ion. Most of them are subjected to ETA only it the investment goes above ~.50 crores. This provision dilutes the impact assessment considerably A mandatory impact assessment with public partiCipation and with provision for a review by specialized environmental courts will eliminate the possible evils of this judicial passiveness.
Description: School of Legal Studies, Cochin University of Science and TechnologY
URI: http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/3094
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Law

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