
Bombay HC raps BMC for âblind eyeâ to air pollution, warns against new project sanctions
The Bombay High Court on Wednesday (December 24, 2025) strongly criticised the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) for failing to tackle Mumbaiâs worsening air pollution and cautioned that it may consider halting approvals for new construction projects if the civic body does not act promptly. A Division Bench of Chief Justice Shree Chandrashekhar and Justice Gautam Ankhad said the corporation has âturned a blind eyeâ to the crisis despite having âwide powersâ to intervene. The judges expressed concern over the sanctioning of more than 125 large-scale development projects, each worth over âč1,000 crore. âIn a small city how can you sanction such projects? This has gone beyond your control. Now you should wait for two weeks because your civic body isnât manning anything properly,â the Chief Justice said. The observations came during the hearing of petitions on Mumbaiâs deteriorating Air Quality Index (AQI). Earlier, the court had directed BMC Commissioner Bhushan Gagrani to appear with a concrete plan. On Wednesday, senior counsel S.U. Kamdar, representing the BMC, claimed that AQI levels were currently âaverage, moderate and satisfactoryâ and argued that pollution had reduced compared to last year. The Bench, however, noted that âone-third of the monitoring devices are either not working or have no data available.â It also questioned why only 39 construction sites were inspected on Tuesday when the BMC has 94 flying squads. âWhat were the remaining squads doing when only 39 of them visited the sites? Why do you have 94 squads then?â the Chief Justice asked, suggesting GPS trackers and button cameras for accountability. âIt is surprising because even traffic constables have GPS and button cameras. Why canât you have it? We think you are not doing anything at all. You arenât doing even bare minimum,â the court said. Mr. Kamdar explained that many squad members were deployed on election duty, but the court rejected this excuse. âElection duty cannot be an excuse. You can always make an application to the Election Commission seeking exemption,â the Bench said. Senior advocate Janak Dwarkadas, appearing for one of the petitioners, said, âRight to life is subservient to election duty,â while amicus curiae Darius Khambata asked, âWho will vote if people die (due to pollution)?â The Bench summoned Mr. Gagrani again in the afternoon and it is when the BMC Commissioner submitted a two-page plan for the next 15 days, including surprise inspections by flying squads and ward-level officers, increased water tankers for deep cleaning, and stricter compliance checks. The court suggested additional steps such as banning mobile phones during site visits and introducing GPS monitoring. âNo one should know which squad will be visiting which site. This is a sensitive work, they shouldnât carry mobile phones,â the Chief Justice said, adding that phones should be deposited with drivers or the department. âIssuing stop-work notices or show-cause notices is not the solution. You have wide powers, you must know how to exercise it. You can even consider terminating the contracts,â the Bench instructed to Mr. Kamdar. The judges also sought...
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