The hills are shaken with the sound of machinery
UPSC Study Note: The Aravalli Hills — Mining, Ecology & the Supreme Court Definition Controversy
1. At a Glance
- The Aravalli Range is India's oldest mountain range (~2 billion years old), stretching ~650 km across Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, and Gujarat. [S1][S4]
- The range is a critical ecological spine of north-west India — it acts as a barrier against desertification (Thar Desert spread), recharges aquifers, and hosts biodiversity hotspots.
- A Supreme Court judgment (20 Nov 2025) accepted a narrow "uniform definition" of Aravalli hills that left over 90% of the range outside legal protection, triggering a massive controversy — and was stayed on 29 Dec 2025. [S2][S3]
- This is a convergence point for GS-I (geography), GS-II (judiciary/governance), GS-III (environment/mining policy) — high probability for both Prelims and Mains.
2. Why in the News
- 20 November 2025: Supreme Court accepted a uniform definition of Aravalli hills and ranges proposed by a court-appointed expert committee. [S2]
- The definition set a minimum elevation threshold of 100 metres above local relief; only 1,048 of 12,081 mapped hills (< 9%) qualify — raising alarm that > 91% of the range loses legal protection and becomes legally mineable. [S3]
- 28 December 2025: SC took suo motu cognisance of how the expert committee's recommendations had been "misconstrued." [S5]
- 29 December 2025: A vacation bench (CJ Surya Kant + Justices J.K. Maheshwari & A.G. Masih) stayed the 20 Nov order and directed formation of a new expert committee to re-examine the definition. [S2][S5]
- January 2026: Ground-level reportage from Nuh district (Mewat, Haryana) documented heavy mining trucks traversing villages every ~5 minutes, locals citing a pervasive "mining mafia" operating day and night. [S4]
- Union Minister Bhupender Yadav stated (22 Dec 2025): "No new mining leases to be permitted in ecologically sensitive areas." [S6]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| Pre-history | Range formed ~2 billion years ago; India's oldest fold mountain system |
| 2009 | Supreme Court initiated proceedings on Aravalli protection (case reference: W.P.(C) 4677/1985 and related matters) [S1][S4] |
| Post-2009 | Multiple SC orders directing states to halt illegal mining; drone & CCTV surveillance mandated [S1] |
| 2025 (Nov 20) | SC accepted expert committee's uniform definition — 100m elevation threshold, 34 designated districts, 500m range criterion [S2][S3] |
| 2025 (Dec 22) | Centre assured Parliament: no mining leases in eco-sensitive Aravalli areas [S6] |
| 2025 (Dec 28-29) | SC took suo motu cognisance; stayed Nov order; ordered fresh expert panel [S5] |
| Jan 2026 | The Hindu ground report highlights continued illegal quarrying in Haryana's Nuh/Mewat region [S4] |
- Predecessor proceedings: SC's ongoing monitoring since the 1995 case (INSC 1338 / W.P. 2997/1995) relating to environment and forest matters. [S1]
- States involved: Rajasthan, Haryana, Delhi, Gujarat — each with differing enforcement records.
4. Core Static Facts
Geography - Total length: ~650 km [S4] - States covered: Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, Gujarat - Age: ~2 billion years (Precambrian / Proterozoic) — India's oldest fold mountains - Highest peak: Guru Shikhar (~1,722 m), Mount Abu, Rajasthan
The Disputed 2025 Definition (stayed) - "Aravalli Hill" = landform in 34 designated districts, minimum 100 m elevation above local/surrounding terrain, including supporting slopes - "Aravalli Range" = two or more such hills within 500 m of each other - Impact: only 1,048 of 12,081 mapped hills qualify (< 9%) [S3] - Over 91% of range, including low scrub, grasslands, ridges — left unprotected [S3]
Institutional / Legal - Case monitored by: Supreme Court of India (suo motu + PIL) - Relevant ministry: Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC); mines regulated under Ministry of Mines - Key legislation: Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 (MMDR Act); Forest Conservation Act, 1980; Environment Protection Act, 1986 - Mining prohibited in: protected areas, eco-sensitive zones (ESZ), tiger reserves, wetlands, CAMPA plantation sites [S1] - Enforcement tools: drones, CCTV cameras, weighbridges, district task forces [S1]
Current SC Directions (as of Dec 2025) - Freeze on new mining leases until a Mining Plan for Sustainable Mining (MPSM) is prepared [S1] - New expert committee ordered (Dec 29, 2025) [S5]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Environmental
- Aravallis act as a natural barrier against Thar Desert encroachment into Indo-Gangetic plains; degradation accelerates desertification. [S3][S4]
- The range is a critical groundwater recharge zone for NCR and Rajasthan; mining disturbs aquifer structure.
- Narrowing the definition to 100m threshold leaves vast low scrub and grassland ecosystems — habitats for leopards, hyenas, migratory birds — legally unprotected. [S3]
- CAMPA (Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority) plantation sites specifically excluded from mining under SC order. [S1]
Economic
- Mining in Aravallis is a major livelihood for stone quarrying communities in Rajasthan and Haryana; sector involves significant informal employment.
- The "mining mafia" operating in Nuh/Mewat illustrates how illegal extraction undercuts formal revenue while causing disproportionate environmental damage. [S4]
- Sustainable mining management plans (MPSM) are intended to balance revenue generation with conservation. [S1]
- Tourism (Mount Abu, Ranthambore vicinity) and agriculture (dependent on Aravalli aquifers) are economic casualties of unregulated mining.
Social / Equity
- Communities in Mewat (Nuh, Haryana) — predominantly rural, agrarian, Muslim-majority — bear disproportionate health and livelihood burdens from quarrying dust. [S4]
- Locals report inability to challenge mining trucks due to fear of the "mining mafia," indicating power asymmetry between extractive interests and vulnerable communities. [S4]
- Environmentalists and local advocates argue: "decisions about the Aravallis should involve and benefit communities" — a key governance equity principle. [S4]
Legal / Constitutional
- The SC case illustrates judicial overreach vs. judicial abdication tension: when courts accept technically narrow definitions, they may inadvertently enable the destruction they sought to prevent.
- The stay on the SC's own order is rare — reflects the court acknowledging that expert committee recommendations were misconstrued in the judicial order. [S2]
- Article 21 (Right to Life) and Article 48-A (DPSP on environmental protection) are constitutional anchors for Aravalli protection litigation.
- Forest Conservation Act, 1980 applies to forest land in the range; diversion requires central approval.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Degraded Aravallis worsen Delhi's air quality (dust storms, particulate matter from barren hills).
- India's commitments under UNCCD (UN Convention to Combat Desertification) are directly relevant — Aravalli degradation undermines Land Degradation Neutrality targets.
Administrative
- Multi-state geography creates federal coordination challenge: Rajasthan, Haryana, Delhi, Gujarat each have separate mining departments and enforcement capacities.
- Satellite mapping (used by the expert committee) vs. ground truth discrepancies highlight data governance issues in defining protected landscapes.
- The phrase "mining mafia" in public discourse points to regulatory capture at district/state levels. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 20 Nov 2025: SC delivers final judgment in Aravalli definition case; accepts uniform definition with 100m elevation threshold across 34 districts. [S2]
- 22 Dec 2025: Union Minister Bhupender Yadav assures: no new mining leases in ecologically sensitive Aravalli areas; Government maintains no immediate ecological threat. [S6]
- 22 Dec 2025: PIB releases factsheet — "Aravalli Hills: Protecting Ecology and Ensuring Sustainable Development" — outlining mining prohibition zones and surveillance mechanisms. [S1]
- 28 Dec 2025: SC takes suo motu cognisance of the Aravalli definition issue. [S5]
- 29 Dec 2025: SC stays its own 20 Nov order; orders fresh expert committee formation (Bench: CJ Surya Kant, Justices J.K. Maheshwari & A.G. Masih). [S2][S5]
- 3 Jan 2026: The Hindu ground report from Jimrawat village, Nuh (Mewat, Haryana) documents active illegal quarrying and community fear of mining mafia. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- The Aravalli Range is India's oldest mountain range, approximately 2 billion years old. [S1][S4]
- The range stretches ~650 km across four states: Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, and Gujarat. [S4]
- The highest peak of the Aravallis is Guru Shikhar (~1,722 m), located in Mount Abu, Rajasthan.
- The Supreme Court's judgment accepting the Aravalli uniform definition was dated 20 November 2025. [S2]
- Under the accepted (but stayed) definition, an Aravalli hill requires a minimum elevation of 100 metres above local relief. [S3]
- The definition covers 34 designated districts; a "range" requires two+ hills within 500 metres. [S3]
- Of 12,081 mapped Aravalli hills, only 1,048 (< 9%) qualify under the 100m threshold — leaving > 91% unprotected. [S3]
- The SC stayed its own November 2025 order on 29 December 2025 — a rare instance of self-correction. [S2][S5]
- The vacation bench that stayed the order comprised CJ Surya Kant and Justices J.K. Maheshwari and A.G. Masih. [S5]
- Mining is absolutely prohibited in eco-sensitive zones, tiger reserves, wetlands, and CAMPA plantation sites in the Aravallis. [S1]
- A freeze on new mining leases was ordered by the SC until a Mining Plan for Sustainable Mining (MPSM) is prepared. [S1]
- Enforcement tools mandated by SC include drones, CCTV cameras, weighbridges, and district task forces. [S1]
- Nuh district (Mewat region, Haryana) is specifically highlighted as a zone of severe illegal quarrying. [S4]
- Union Minister Bhupender Yadav (MoEFCC) stated on 22 Dec 2025: no new mining leases in ecologically sensitive areas. [S6]
- The Aravallis serve as the primary natural barrier preventing Thar Desert encroachment into the Indo-Gangetic plains. [S3][S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-I: Physical geography of India — ancient fold mountains, desertification - GS-II: Judiciary — SC activism, suo motu cognisance, judicial review; Federalism — multi-state resource governance - GS-III: Environment and ecology — biodiversity, mining regulation, sustainable development; Land degradation; MMDR Act
Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: "Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment" - GS-II: "Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States... Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure" - GS-I: "Distribution of key natural resources across the world and across India"
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Supreme Court's acceptance of a narrow elevation-based definition of the Aravalli hills in 2025 threatened to render over 90% of the range legally mineable. Critically examine the tension between judicial reliance on technical expert committees and the ecological imperatives of protecting ancient landscapes." (GS-II / GS-III) 2. "Unregulated mining in the Aravalli range poses multi-dimensional threats to ecology, water security, and community livelihoods in north-west India. Discuss with reference to existing legal frameworks and their implementation gaps." (GS-III) 3. "Community participation in environmental governance remains a distant ideal in India. Illustrate with the case of Aravalli hill communities in Haryana and Rajasthan." (GS-II / GS-I)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| MMDR Act, 1957 & 2021 amendments | Primary statute governing mining in Aravallis and across India |
| Forest Conservation Act, 1980 & 2023 amendment | FC Act applies to Aravalli forest land; 2023 amendment controversially narrowed "forest" definition |
| Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) | Core protection mechanism around Aravalli notified areas; SC has issued directions on ESZ buffers |
| Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) — UNCCD | India's international commitment; Aravalli degradation is a direct test case |
| CAMPA (Compensatory Afforestation) | Funds and plantation sites in Aravallis; understanding CAMPA mechanism is essential |
| Desertification and Thar Desert dynamics | Aravallis as ecological firewall; relevant for geography + climate change sections |
| Mewat / Nuh — Socio-economic profile | Backward district with minority-majority population; intersects environment-equity discourse |
| National Green Tribunal (NGT) vs. Supreme Court jurisdiction | Both bodies active on mining cases; understanding jurisdictional overlap is examinable |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- "Aravallis are in Rajasthan only" — Wrong. Range spans four states: Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, Gujarat. Confusing this costs marks in geography questions.
- Confusing "oldest" with "highest" — Aravallis are India's oldest mountains but NOT highest (Himalayas are youngest but highest due to active tectonics).
- The SC stayed its order ≠ SC struck down the definition — The stay is interim; a new expert committee was constituted. The legal status remains in flux as of early 2026.
- Mining ban ≠ total ban across Aravallis — The prohibition is specific to protected areas, ESZs, tiger reserves, wetlands, CAMPA sites; sustainable mining plans are being sought for other areas.
- Attributing the definition to MoEFCC — The definition was proposed by a court-appointed expert committee and accepted by the Supreme Court, not by any ministry. Government's role was assurance, not the definition itself.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Aravalli Hills: Protecting Ecology and Ensuring Sustainable Development" — PIB Factsheet — https://www.pib.gov.in/FactsheetDetails.aspx?id=150596 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] "Supreme Court Stays Aravalli Definition, Sparks Environmental Debate" — Down to Earth — https://www.downtoearth.org.in/forests/supreme-court-stays-its-recent-verdict-on-defining-aravalli-hills-and-ranges — (Tier 4)
- [S3] "Uniform definition of Aravallis accepted by Supreme Court will be catastrophic for India's oldest mountain range" — Down to Earth — https://www.downtoearth.org.in/forests/uniform-definition-of-aravallis-accepted-by-supreme-court-will-be-catastrophic-for-indias-oldest-mountain-range — (Tier 4)
- [S4] "The hills are shaken with the sound of machinery" — The Hindu, 3 January 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-03/th_international/articleGISFCV87J-12975691.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S5] "Supreme Court orders formation of new expert committee on Aravalli range definition" — Newsonair (AIR), 29 Dec 2025 — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/supreme-court-orders-formation-of-new-expert-committee-on-aravalli-range-definition — (Tier 1 adjacent / government broadcaster)
- [S6] "No new mining leases to be permitted in ecologically sensitive areas — Union Minister Bhupender Yadav" — Newsonair, 22 Dec 2025 — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/no-new-mining-leases-to-be-permitted-in-ecologically-sensitive-areas-union-minister-bhupender-yadav — (Tier 1 adjacent)
Note: This study note is grounded in verified facts from Tier 1 (PIB), Tier 4 (The Hindu, Down to Earth), and government broadcaster sources as of June 2026. The legal status of the Aravalli definition remains sub judice — track Supreme Court updates before examination.