Centre has no plans to change land acquisition policy: Cabinet Secretary
Centre Has No Plans to Change Land Acquisition Policy — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Cabinet Secretary T.V. Somanathan stated (January 3, 2026) that the Union government has no plans to amend the existing land acquisition policy, even as land acquisition remains the single largest bottleneck in infrastructure project delivery. [S1]
- The statement came after the 50th meeting of PRAGATI (Pro-Active Governance and Timely Implementation), chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. [S1]
- Land acquisition issues account for 35% of all pending issues flagged across 3,300+ infrastructure projects reviewed under PRAGATI. [S1]
- This is directly relevant for GS-II (Governance, Government Policies) and GS-III (Infrastructure, Land Reforms).
2. Why in the News
- January 3, 2026: At the post-meeting briefing of PRAGATI's 50th session, Cabinet Secretary Somanathan explicitly ruled out any changes to land acquisition law, despite persistent project delays attributed to land-related issues. [S1]
- PRAGATI has reviewed 3,300+ projects worth ₹85 lakh crore; of 7,735 issues raised, 7,156 were resolved — yet 35% of resolved issues were land acquisition-related, signalling the structural nature of the problem. [S1]
- The Railway Board Chairman and Secretaries of infrastructure ministries corroborated land acquisition as a primary cause of project pendency. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1894: The colonial Land Acquisition Act, 1894 governed compulsory acquisition in India for over a century — provided no mandatory rehabilitation/resettlement (R&R). [S3]
- 2013: Replaced by the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013 (RFCTLARR Act), which came into force January 1, 2014. [S3]
- 2014–15: The NDA government attempted to amend the RFCTLARR Act via an Ordinance (promulgated three times) to dilute consent clauses and Social Impact Assessment (SIA) requirements for five categories of projects; the amendment lapsed after the Land Acquisition (Amendment) Bill, 2015 failed to pass the Rajya Sabha. [S3]
- 2015: PRAGATI platform launched to monitor infrastructure projects in real time; land acquisition identified as a recurring theme from its earliest meetings. [S2]
- 2026 (Jan): 50th PRAGATI meeting — government reaffirms status quo on land acquisition law. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Governing Act | RFCTLARR Act, 2013 (Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act) |
| Replaced | Land Acquisition Act, 1894 |
| Enacted | September 26, 2013; in force January 1, 2014 |
| Implementing Ministry | Ministry of Rural Development (Department of Land Resources) |
| Consent Requirement — PPP projects | Mandatory consent of ≥70% of affected families |
| Consent Requirement — Private companies | Mandatory consent of ≥80% of affected families |
| Social Impact Assessment (SIA) | Mandatory before acquisition |
| Compensation | Up to 4× market value in rural areas; 2× in urban areas |
| Exempted legislations | 16 Acts, including Railways Act 1989, SEZ Act 2005, Atomic Energy Act 1962 |
| PRAGATI | Pro-Active Governance and Timely Implementation; launched 2015; chaired by PM |
| PRAGATI — 50th meeting | January 3, 2026 |
| Projects reviewed under PRAGATI | 3,300+ projects worth ₹85 lakh crore |
| Issues raised / resolved | 7,735 raised; 7,156 resolved |
| Land acquisition share of pending issues | 35% of resolved issues |
| Forest/wildlife/environmental issues | 20% of resolved issues |
| Right of Use/Way issues | 18% of resolved issues |
[S1][S2][S3]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Land acquisition delays are estimated to impose significant cost overruns and time delays on infrastructure projects — some projects dating to the 1990s were completed only after PRAGATI intervention. [S1]
- With ₹85 lakh crore worth of projects under PRAGATI review, even marginal acceleration in land acquisition resolution has macro-level fiscal savings. [S1]
- The government's reluctance to amend the law reflects a political economy calculus: weakening compensation norms risks rural unrest and electoral backlash.
Social
- RFCTLARR 2013 introduced mandatory rehabilitation and resettlement (R&R) for displaced families — a major departure from the 1894 Act which had no such provisions. [S3]
- 80% consent clause for private projects protects communities from coercive acquisition but creates delays in industrial and infrastructure corridors.
- Tribal and marginalised communities disproportionately occupy land in resource-rich/infrastructure corridors; the Act intersects with PESA (Panchayats Extension to Scheduled Areas Act) and the Forest Rights Act, 2006.
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 300A (Constitution): Right to property is a constitutional right (not a fundamental right post-44th Amendment, 1978); the state cannot deprive a person of property except by authority of law. [S3]
- "Public purpose" definition under RFCTLARR 2013 is broader than the 1894 Act but still contested in courts.
- Section 24 of RFCTLARR 2013 (lapsing of old awards) was extensively litigated; the Supreme Court in Pune Municipal Corporation v. Harakchand Misirimal Solanki (2014) and subsequent cases significantly interpreted its scope.
- The 2015 Ordinance series highlighted constitutional limits on executive bypass of Parliament on land law reform.
Administrative / Governance
- 35% of all project issues flagged under PRAGATI are land-related — the highest single category — indicating systemic administrative failure beyond legal frameworks. [S1]
- Multiple agencies involved: District Collectors, State Revenue Departments, Union Ministries, Environment Ministry (for forest clearances) — creating coordination failures.
- Forest/wildlife clearances (20%) and Right-of-Way issues (18%) are distinct from land acquisition per se but operationally intertwined. [S1]
- PRAGATI's digital platform (geo-spatial mapping, video-conferencing with CMs/Chief Secretaries) has partially compensated for legal bottlenecks through real-time monitoring.
Ethical / Governance
- The government's stated position — no policy change despite 35% of project delays being land-related — reflects a trade-off between development velocity and rights protection.
- Critics argue that SIA requirements and consent clauses, while ethically sound, are procedurally undermined by state machinery; the problem is implementation, not law.
- PRAGATI as accountability tool: Cabinet Secretary's annual briefing model introduces transparency into project monitoring without legislative reform.
Historical
- The 1894 Act was used for large-scale displacement (dams, mining, industry) with minimal compensation — generating the "land acquisition = dispossession" narrative.
- Post-Liberalisation (1990s), SEZ-driven acquisition controversies (Singur, Nandigram, 2006–08) directly catalysed political demand for a new law, culminating in 2013.
- The 2015 amendment attempt's failure signalled the political non-viability of diluting consent clauses — a constraint that shapes current policy continuity.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 3, 2026: 50th PRAGATI meeting; Cabinet Secretary explicitly rules out changes to land acquisition law; announces 3,300+ projects (₹85 lakh crore) reviewed, 7,156/7,735 issues resolved. [S1]
- 2025–26: PRAGATI celebrated a decade of operation (launched 2015); PIB published a retrospective noting its role as a model of cooperative, outcome-driven governance. [S2]
- Ongoing: Land acquisition and forest clearance clearances continue to be cited by Railway Board and infrastructure ministries as primary causes of project delays. [S1]
- VisionIAS (Jan 2026): RFCTLARR Act 2013 flagged as a current affairs topic, indicating renewed UPSC relevance. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- The RFCTLARR Act, 2013 replaced the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 and came into force on January 1, 2014. [S3]
- Implementing ministry: Ministry of Rural Development (Department of Land Resources) — not Ministry of Housing or Finance. [S3]
- Consent threshold for PPP projects: 70% of affected families; for private companies: 80%. [S3]
- Compensation in rural areas: up to 4× the market value; in urban areas: 2× the market value. [S3]
- 16 Acts are exempt from RFCTLARR 2013, including Railways Act 1989 and SEZ Act 2005. [S3]
- PRAGATI stands for Pro-Active Governance and Timely Implementation; launched 2015; chaired by the Prime Minister. [S2]
- The 50th PRAGATI meeting was held in January 2026; the Cabinet Secretary who briefed the media was T.V. Somanathan. [S1]
- PRAGATI reviewed 3,300+ projects worth ₹85 lakh crore; 7,735 issues raised; 7,156 resolved. [S1]
- 35% of issues resolved under PRAGATI were related to land acquisition — the single largest category. [S1]
- Forest, wildlife, and environmental issues accounted for 20% of resolved PRAGATI issues. [S1]
- Right of use/way issues accounted for 18% of resolved PRAGATI issues. [S1]
- The Right to Property is protected under Article 300A of the Constitution — a constitutional right, not a fundamental right (removed by 44th Amendment, 1978). [S3]
- The NDA government's Land Acquisition (Amendment) Bill, 2015 lapsed after failing to pass the Rajya Sabha; an ordinance was re-promulgated three times. [S3]
- Social Impact Assessment (SIA) is mandatory under RFCTLARR 2013 before any acquisition proceeds. [S3]
- Cabinet Secretary Somanathan clarified that the government has not quantified fiscal savings from timely project monitoring under PRAGATI. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | GS-II: Government Policies & Interventions; Governance, Transparency, Accountability. GS-III: Infrastructure, Land Reforms, Investment Models. |
| Syllabus Headings | GS-II: "Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation." GS-III: "Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways etc.; Investment models." |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"Despite PRAGATI resolving over 7,000 infrastructure project issues in a decade, land acquisition remains the dominant bottleneck. Critically examine the structural reasons for this and suggest institutional reforms short of amending the RFCTLARR Act, 2013." (GS-III / GS-II)
-
"The RFCTLARR Act, 2013 seeks to balance development imperatives with the rights of displaced communities. Evaluate whether this balance has been achieved in practice, with reference to recent infrastructure outcomes." (GS-II / GS-III)
-
"Discuss the role of PRAGATI as a governance innovation. To what extent can process-level interventions substitute for substantive legal reform in accelerating infrastructure delivery in India?" (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| RFCTLARR Act, 2013 — Provisions & Amendments | Core statute directly at issue; SIA, consent clauses, compensation formula are all Prelims-testable. |
| PRAGATI Platform | Institutional mechanism that exposed the land acquisition problem at scale; understanding its design is essential. |
| Forest Rights Act, 2006 (FRA) | 20% of PRAGATI issues involve forest/wildlife clearances — intersects with tribal rights and infrastructure. |
| PESA Act, 1996 | Governs gram sabha consent in scheduled areas; overlaps with consent requirements for land acquisition in tribal regions. |
| Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Models in Infrastructure | 70% consent clause for PPP projects creates specific implementation challenges studied under GS-III. |
| Article 300A & Property Rights | Constitutional basis of land acquisition; 44th Amendment history is a frequent Prelims question. |
| National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP) | The broader pipeline of ₹111 lakh crore projects of which PRAGATI-reviewed projects form a subset. |
| Environmental Clearance Process (MoEFCC) | Forest/wildlife clearances (20% of PRAGATI issues) flow through this ministry — distinct from land acquisition law. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Wrong ministry: RFCTLARR Act is administered by the Ministry of Rural Development (Dept. of Land Resources), not the Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs or the Finance Ministry.
-
Consent thresholds reversed: Aspirants frequently swap — 70% is for PPP projects; 80% is for private company projects. The higher threshold applies to purely private (not public) purposes.
-
PRAGATI chaired by Cabinet Secretary, not PM: PRAGATI meetings are chaired by the Prime Minister; the Cabinet Secretary presides over the DARPG review mechanism. Confusing the chair is a common trap.
-
Property right is constitutional, not fundamental: Post 44th Amendment (1978), Right to Property moved from Part III (Fundamental Rights) to Article 300A (Constitutional Rights). It is NOT a fundamental right — a perennial Prelims trap.
-
2015 Amendment did not pass: The LARR (Amendment) Bill 2015 and its Ordinance series lapsed — no amendment to the 2013 Act has been enacted. Aspirants sometimes assume the NDA amendment succeeded; the current law remains the 2013 Act as originally passed.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Centre has no plans to change land acquisition policy: Cabinet Secretary" — The Hindu, January 3, 2026 — Article content provided in prompt — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "PRAGATI: A Decade of Cooperative, Outcome-Driven Governance" — Press Information Bureau, January 13, 2026 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2214258 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "The Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill, 2013" — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-right-to-fair-compensation-and-transparency-in-land-acquisition-rehabilitation-and-resettlement-bill-2013 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "RFCTLARR Act, 2013 | Current Affairs" — VisionIAS, January 2026 — https://visionias.in/current-affairs/monthly-magazine/2026-01-28/polity-and-governance/rfctlarr-act-2013 — (Tier 4)