Plea in SC seeks fire safety protocol for high-risk buildings


UPSC Study Note: Plea in SC Seeks Fire Safety Protocol for High-Risk Buildings


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Petition filed by Advocate Narendra Kumar Goswami
Forum Supreme Court of India
Constitutional hook Article 21 — Right to Life
Primary triggering incidents Malviya Nagar fire (Delhi) & Aliganj fire (Lucknow), June 2026
Deaths cited in petition At least 37
Premises targeted by framework Schools, coaching centres, hotels, hospitals, commercial complexes
Technical standard in force NBC 2016, Part 4 — Fire and Life Safety (Bureau of Indian Standards) [S3, S6]
Fire NOC authority Chief Fire Officer (state/ULB level) [S6]
Model legislation source MHA Revised Model Fire Service Bill (circulated to states) [S2]
Recent BIS update Standardized Development and Building Regulations, 2023 [S3]
Constitutional placement Fire services — Entry 6, List II (State List), Seventh Schedule
Haryana state act Haryana Fire and Emergency Services Act, 2022 [S5]
Punjab state act Punjab Fire and Emergency Services Act, 2024 [S4]
Statistic 20 Indian cities account for ~80% of all building fire deaths in India [S7]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Social

Economic

Scientific / Technological

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Fire services is listed under Entry 6, List II (State List) of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.
  2. The National Building Code (NBC) 2016, Part 4 is titled 'Fire and Life Safety' and is published by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS). [S3, S6]
  3. BIS functions under the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution (not MHA, not MoHUA).
  4. The MHA circulated a Revised Model Fire Service Bill to states as a legislative template. [S2]
  5. Haryana Fire and Emergency Services Act, 2022 (Act No. 14 of 2022) is one of the few dedicated state fire-services laws. [S5]
  6. Punjab Fire and Emergency Services Act, 2024 (Act No. 12 of 2024) is among the most recent state enactments. [S4]
  7. The June 2026 PIL in the SC was filed by advocate Narendra Kumar Goswami. [S1]
  8. The petition cites Article 21 (Right to Life) as the constitutional basis, framing preventable fire deaths as a state failure. [S1]
  9. The two fires triggering the PIL — Malviya Nagar (Delhi) and Aliganj (Lucknow) — together caused at least 37 deaths. [S1]
  10. The petition demands a centralised public digital portal displaying valid Fire NOCs, occupancy certificates, and audit compliance status. [S1]
  11. BIS issued Standardized Development and Building Regulations, 2023 to ensure safety, accessibility, and sustainability in construction. [S3]
  12. Approximately 20 Indian cities account for around 80% of all building fire deaths in India. [S7]
  13. The petition proposes tamper-proof, QR-coded fire safety certificates with penal consequences for false certification. [S1]
  14. Fire NOC is issued by the Chief Fire Officer at the state/urban local body level — not by a central authority. [S6]
  15. The petition also seeks prohibition on use of basements, rooftops, and temporary structures for classrooms or public assembly without explicit safety approval. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-II: Governance, Constitution, Fundamental Rights; Centre-State relations; Role of judiciary - GS-III: Disaster Management; Urban infrastructure and safety - GS-IV (Ethics): Accountability of public officials; False certification and corruption

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability"; "Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies"; "Separation of powers between various organs" - GS-III: "Disaster and disaster management"; "Infrastructure: urbanisation, its problems and remedies"

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Recurring fire tragedies in India's urban coaching centres and hotels reflect systemic regulatory failure rather than isolated accidents. Critically examine the legal and administrative gaps in India's fire safety governance and suggest reforms." (GS-II/III) 2. "The Supreme Court's potential intervention in fire safety standards raises questions about judicial overreach versus constitutional duty. Discuss with reference to Article 21 jurisprudence and the federal division of subjects." (GS-II) 3. "A centralised fire safety digital portal has been proposed as a governance reform. Evaluate how digital public infrastructure can address compliance deficits in urban local bodies." (GS-II/III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Disaster Management Act, 2005 & NDMA Statutory framework for disaster preparedness; fire is a notified disaster category
National Building Code (NBC) 2016 Primary technical standard on fire safety norms directly cited in this context
Rajinder Nagar coaching centre tragedy, 2024 Immediate political precursor; overlapping issue of unsafe basement use
Article 21 jurisprudence Right to life expanded to include safe environment; backbone of the PIL
Centre-State relations & State List subjects Fire services is a state subject — federalism dimension of any national mandate
Urban Local Bodies & 74th Amendment ULBs are the first-responder regulatory authority; municipal reform angle
Right to Information & Public Disclosure Proposed digital NOC portal connects to transparency and accountability frameworks
Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) & standardisation BIS publishes NBC; its role in building safety and product certification

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry for NBC/BIS: BIS (which publishes NBC 2016) is under Ministry of Consumer Affairs, NOT MoHUA or MHA. Aspirants often confuse building regulation with urban affairs.
  2. Fire services as a Central subject: Fire services is State List, not Concurrent List. Any central framework requires either state adoption or judicial direction — it cannot be legislated centrally under normal circumstances.
  3. Confusing Fire NOC with building plan approval: Fire NOC is issued by the Chief Fire Officer (state/ULB); building plan approval is a separate municipal function. Both are required but issued by different authorities.
  4. Conflating the 2024 Rajinder Nagar flood tragedy with a fire incident: The 2024 coaching centre deaths in Delhi's Rajinder Nagar were due to flooding, not fire — though both expose the same unsafe basement use pattern. Do not cite it as a fire tragedy.
  5. Article 21 scope: Students sometimes limit Article 21 to personal liberty/criminal procedure. The SC has vastly expanded it to include safe living and working environments, clean air, safe buildings — this PIL is a direct application of that expansive reading.

11. Sources