NGT directs southern States to use clean air funds


NGT Directs Southern States to Use Clean Air Funds

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
January 2019 NCAP launched by MoEFCC as India's first long-term national air quality strategy [S2]
2019-20 NCAP funds begin flowing to identified non-attainment cities; SAP framework rolled out to States [S3]
2021-22 Revised target set: 40% reduction in PM2.5 and PM10 concentrations by 2026 (base year 2017) [S4]
2022-23 Coverage expanded to 131 cities (originally 122 non-attainment cities) [S3]
2024 Total performance-linked grants to 130 cities: ₹13,036.52 crore; utilisation ≈ 71% nationally [S3]
2025-26 Total released: ₹13,415 crore (2019-20 to Dec 2025); ₹10,003 crore utilised [S5]
May 2026 NGT Southern Zone Bench directions on SAP implementation in southern States [S1]

Predecessors / Related Initiatives: - National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) — baseline standards against which NCAP targets are calibrated. - Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) — Delhi-NCR specific emergency response mechanism; NCAP is the nationwide, structural counterpart. - 15th Finance Commission grants for air quality improvement in million-plus cities were linked to NCAP compliance.


4. Core Static Facts

NCAP — Examinable Data Points

Parameter Detail
Launch date January 2019 [S2]
Nodal Ministry Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change (MoEFCC) [S2]
Implementing Body Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB); State PCBs at State level
Cities covered 131 cities (non-attainment cities — PM2.5/PM10 above NAAQS for ≥5 consecutive years) [S3]
Pollution target 40% reduction in PM2.5 & PM10 by 2026 (base year: 2017) [S4]
Total funds released (2019-20 to 2025-26) ₹13,415 crore [S5]
Funds utilised (national) ₹10,003 crore (~74.6%) [S5]
Grant nature Performance-linked grants (disbursed against air quality improvement outcomes)
Karnataka allocation ₹597.54 crore (2019-20 to 2023-24); Bengaluru: ₹541.1 crore [S1]
NGT Bench Southern Zone Bench, Chennai [S1]
Statutory basis of NGT National Green Tribunal Act, 2010
States directed (May 2026) Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana + Puducherry UT [S1]

Key Definitional Terms: - Non-attainment city: A city where ambient PM2.5 or PM10 levels exceed NAAQS for five or more consecutive years. - State Action Plan (SAP): State-level implementation roadmap prepared under NCAP, covering sectoral emission reduction measures. - Environmental compensation: Penalty that NGT can impose on violators/defaulters under NGT Act, 2010 (polluter-pays principle).


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Economic

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. NCAP was launched in January 2019 by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC). [S2]
  2. NCAP covers 131 non-attainment cities across India. [S3]
  3. NCAP's current target: 40% reduction in PM2.5 and PM10 concentrations by 2026 (base year: 2017). [S4]
  4. Grants under NCAP are performance-linked, not unconditional block grants. [S3]
  5. Total NCAP funds released from 2019-20 to December 2025: ₹13,415 crore; utilised: ₹10,003 crore. [S5]
  6. The NGT Southern Zone Bench is located in Chennai (not Delhi). [S1]
  7. Karnataka received ₹597.54 crore under NCAP between 2019-20 and 2023-24; Bengaluru alone received ₹541.1 crore. [S1]
  8. As of October 2024, Bengaluru had utilised only 13% of its NCAP allocation. [S1]
  9. NGT's May 2026 order covers five States + one UT: Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and Puducherry. [S1]
  10. Of Karnataka's utilised NCAP funds, >86% went to road dust control; only 6.6% to vehicular emissions. [S1]
  11. The NGT Act, 2010 empowers the Tribunal to impose environmental compensation — a polluter-pays mechanism. [S1]
  12. Non-attainment city definition: PM2.5/PM10 exceeds NAAQS for five or more consecutive years.
  13. Implementing body for NCAP at the national level: Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) under MoEFCC. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation; Government policies for environmental protection
GS-II Statutory, regulatory and quasi-judicial bodies (NGT); Centre-State relations (devolution and fund utilisation)
GS-II Urban governance; Role of Urban Local Bodies

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The National Clean Air Programme has made significant financial outlays but struggles with effective fund utilisation at the sub-national level. Analyse the structural reasons for this gap and suggest reforms." (GS-III, 250 words)

  2. "Examine the role of the National Green Tribunal in strengthening environmental governance in India, with reference to its recent directions on clean air fund utilisation." (GS-II, 150 words)

  3. "Air pollution in India is often framed as a northern plains problem. Critically evaluate this perception in light of recent judicial interventions in southern States." (GS-I/GS-III, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Green Tribunal Act, 2010 Statutory basis for NGT's jurisdiction; powers, composition, green benches
Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) Delhi-NCR air emergency mechanism; compare with NCAP's structural approach
15th Finance Commission & Air Quality Grants Conditionality linking FC grants to NCAP compliance; urban local body funding
NAAQS (National Ambient Air Quality Standards) Technical benchmark that defines non-attainment cities; CPCB's role
Environment Protection Act, 1986 Parent statute under which NCAP is notified; polluter-pays provisions
PM2.5 / PM10 and Health Effects Scientific basis; WHO air quality guidelines (2021 revision); linkage to SDG 3
Urban Local Bodies and Solid Waste / Dust Management Third-tier governance gap illustrated by Bengaluru's low utilisation
Polluter-Pays Principle in Indian Law Constitutional + statutory grounding; SC judgments (Vellore Citizens case)

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Bench location: NGT has five benches — Principal (New Delhi), and Zonal Benches at Bhopal (Central), Pune (Western), Kolkata (Eastern), Chennai (Southern). Aspirants often default to "Delhi NGT" for all orders — this order came from Chennai.

  2. Confusing NCAP with GRAP: GRAP is a reactive, emergency response mechanism specific to Delhi-NCR; NCAP is a proactive, structural, nationwide programme covering 131 cities. They are complementary, not the same.

  3. Misidentifying the Ministry: NCAP is under MoEFCC, not the Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs (MoHUA), though ULBs implement it on the ground.

  4. Wrong pollution target year: The original target was 20-30% reduction by 2024; this was revised upward to 40% by 2026. Using the old target in an answer is a common error.

  5. Assuming uniform utilisation: Nationally, ~74% of NCAP funds are utilised — but this masks huge State-level variation. Karnataka (post-2025 affidavit) is at 76%, while Bengaluru was at 13% as late as October 2024. Citing a national average to describe State performance is misleading.


11. Sources


Note: Facts from S1 (article content) are drawn from the supplied excerpt. Facts from S2–S6 are grounded in PIB/PRS search-result snippets. No speculative claims have been included.