CAQM tightens pollution norms for industries in Delhi


CAQM Tightens Pollution Norms for Industries in Delhi-NCR

1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Body Commission for Air Quality Management in NCR and Adjoining Areas (CAQM)
Enabling Act The Commission for Air Quality Management in NCR and Adjoining Areas Act, 2021
Predecessor Environment Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority (EPCA)
First constituted via Ordinance, October 2020
Jurisdiction Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh (NCR + adjoining areas)
Ministry Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC)
New PM emission limit 50 mg/Nm³ (milligrams per normal cubic metre)
Earlier PM emission limit 80 mg/Nm³ (notified June 2022)
Categories covered 17 categories of highly polluting industries (CPCB-identified); Red Category medium & large air-polluting industries; food & food processing units (with boilers/thermic fluid heaters); textile industries (with boilers/thermic fluid heaters); metal industries (with furnaces)
Technical basis IIT Kanpur study + CPCB Technical Committee
Implementation deadline Aug 1, 2026 (large/medium); Oct 1, 2026 (remaining)
Enforcement agencies State govts of Haryana, UP, Rajasthan, GNCTD; Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC); respective State PCBs
CAQM's overriding power CAQM orders prevail over state governments, CPCB, and state PCBs in case of conflict
Directions issued since inception 78 statutory directions + 11 advisories

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Economic

Administrative / Governance

Scientific / Technological

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. CAQM was constituted by Ordinance in October 2020, subsequently converted into the CAQM Act, 2021. [S5][S6]
  2. CAQM replaced EPCA (Environment Pollution Prevention and Control Authority), which was a Supreme Court–mandated body. [S5]
  3. The new PM emission limit for Delhi-NCR industries is 50 mg/Nm³, down from 80 mg/Nm³ notified in June 2022. [S4]
  4. The technical basis for 50 mg/Nm³ is a study by IIT Kanpur and a CPCB Technical Committee. [S1][S4]
  5. Categories covered include 17 highly polluting industries (CPCB-identified), Red Category medium/large industries, food processing, textile (with boilers), and metal industries (with furnaces). [S4]
  6. CAQM's statutory directions override orders of state governments, CPCB, and state PCBs within its jurisdiction. [S6]
  7. CAQM's jurisdiction spans 5 states/UTs: Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh. [S6]
  8. Since inception, CAQM has issued 78 statutory directions and 11 advisories. [S7]
  9. Implementing agency for compliance: state PCBs and Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC) — not CPCB directly. [S2]
  10. PM emission unit of measurement: mg/Nm³ = milligrams per normal cubic metre. [S4]
  11. Parent ministry: Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC). [S6]
  12. Compliance deadline for large/medium industries: August 1, 2026; for smaller units: October 1, 2026. [S2]
  13. Non-compliance with CAQM statutory directions carries penalty of up to 5 years imprisonment under the CAQM Act. [S6]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper GS-III (Environment & Ecology; Science & Technology) + GS-II (Governance, Statutory Bodies, Centre-State)
GS-III Syllabus heading Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation; Environmental impact assessment
GS-II Syllabus heading Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies; Centre-State relations

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) represents a new model of cooperative federalism in environmental governance. Examine its institutional design, powers, and effectiveness in tackling Delhi-NCR's air quality crisis." (GS-II/GS-III) 2. "Industrial stack emissions are a major but often underemphasised contributor to urban air pollution in India. Critically evaluate the regulatory framework for controlling particulate matter emissions from industries in the Delhi-NCR region." (GS-III) 3. "Evidence-based environmental regulation requires sustained investment in scientific institutions. Discuss, with reference to IIT Kanpur's role in revising PM emission norms for Delhi-NCR industries." (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
GRAP (Graded Response Action Plan) The primary demand-side tool CAQM deploys during poor AQI episodes; works in tandem with industrial emission norms
CPCB & State PCBs — structure and powers CAQM overrides CPCB; understanding CPCB's role clarifies CAQM's institutional novelty
National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) Umbrella framework targeting 40% PM reduction by 2026; CAQM's industrial norms feed into NCAP goals
Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981 Parent statute under which CPCB and state PCBs operate; CAQM Act 2021 sits alongside/over it
Environment Protection Act (EPA), 1986 Foundation of India's environmental law; emission standards derive authority from EPA rules
Stubble Burning — Punjab/Haryana CAQM's jurisdiction covers this major seasonal contributor to Delhi air pollution
WHO Air Quality Guidelines (2021) Global benchmark against which India's PM standards are compared; 2021 revision tightened PM₂.₅ annual guideline to 5 µg/m³
Real-Time Source Apportionment Studies Scientific tool used to identify sector-wise pollution contributions; IIT Kanpur is a leading centre for this in India

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. CAQM ≠ CPCB: CAQM is a statutory commission with overriding powers over CPCB within NCR — aspirants often conflate the two or assume CPCB is the apex body in this context.
  2. CAQM replaced EPCA, not NGT: EPCA was a Supreme Court–constituted body; CAQM is Parliament-constituted — confusion about which body was replaced and by what mechanism is a common trap.
  3. Wrong year for CAQM Act: The Act is 2021, not 2020 (the 2020 Ordinance was the first ordinance; two ordinances preceded the Act).
  4. PM unit confusion: The limit is mg/Nm³ (milligrams per normal cubic metre), not µg/m³ (the unit used for ambient air quality standards like AQI). Conflating stack emission units with ambient air quality units is a common error.
  5. Jurisdiction scope: CAQM covers 5 states/UTs (Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan, UP), not just Delhi — aspirants may underestimate its geographic scope.
  6. 80 → 50 mg/Nm³: The earlier standard was 80 (not 100 or 60) — ensure the precise prior benchmark is memorised, not a rounded approximation.

11. Sources