Thursday, November 27, 2025

TeaTimeTreats: Polluted Skies, Digital Justice

 Polluted Skies, Digital Justice

Shaheen P Parshad

 

Delhi’s air has become a daily headline, a thick grey blanket that settles over the city and seeps into every conversation. The Air Quality Index, which once hovered in the “moderate” range during the winter months, now routinely spikes into the “very poor” or “severe” categories, turning a routine commute into a health gamble. At the same time, the Chief Justice of India’s recent directive to resume virtual hearings has sparked a fresh debate about how our institutions adapt to a world where the environment itself has become a disruptor.

 

The numbers are stark. A recent morning saw the AQI at 450, a level that would trigger emergency measures in many countries. For residents, this isn’t just a statistic; it’s the cough that follows a jog, the child’s asthma inhaler that suddenly feels heavier, the constant haze that blurs the city’s skyline. The government’s response—periodic bans on construction, a temporary halt to diesel‑powered trucks, and the occasional “green” rally—offers little comfort when the air itself seems to be a moving target.

 

Enter the judiciary. In a bold move, the Chief Justice announced that a significant portion of the Supreme Court’s workload would continue online, citing the need to protect judges, lawyers, and litigants from the health risks posed by polluted air. The decision, while pragmatic, raises a broader question: how should our democratic institutions respond when the environment interferes with the very act of governance?

 

From an outsider’s perspective, the parallel with the ozone layer narrative is hard to ignore. Decades ago, the world rallied around a clear, visual threat—a gaping hole over Antarctica—that seemed distant yet demanded collective action. The Montreal Protocol turned that alarm into a success story, proving that coordinated policy could heal a wounded atmosphere. Today, Delhi’s choking air is a visceral, everyday reminder that the planet’s health is no longer a distant concern but a pressing local reality.

 

The CJI’s virtual hearing order can be seen as a modern‑day echo of that earlier resolve. Just as the ozone story taught us that a single, well‑targeted agreement could reverse a global crisis, the move to digitize court proceedings shows that institutions can adapt when the environment threatens their core functions. Yet, the analogy also highlights a difference: while the ozone hole was a single, measurable phenomenon, air pollution is a mosaic of sources—traffic, construction, crop burning, industrial emissions—each demanding a distinct solution.

 

What does this mean for Delhi’s residents? For one, it underscores the urgency of integrating environmental considerations into every facet of public life. If courts can pivot to virtual platforms to safeguard health, then businesses, schools, and civic bodies should be equally agile in rethinking operations. A city that can’t breathe shouldn’t be forced to choose between justice and safety.

 

The CJI’s decision also invites a broader conversation about the right to a clean environment. In many jurisdictions, a healthy atmosphere is increasingly viewed as a fundamental right, inseparable from the right to life and liberty. By opting for virtual hearings, the judiciary is, in effect, acknowledging that the state has a duty to protect its citizens not only from legal injustice but also from environmental harm that impedes access to justice.

 

In my own writing on the ozone layer, I often reflect on how a single image—a dark spot over the South Pole—captured global attention and spurred action. Delhi’s sky, though less photogenic, carries a similar weight. It is a daily reminder that the challenges we face are no longer abstract graphs or distant headlines; they are the air we share, the courts we attend, the lives we lead.

 

The path forward is not simple. It requires coordinated policy, technological innovation, and a shift in public mindset. It also demands that institutions, from the highest court to the local municipal office, recognize that their decisions have an environmental footprint. The CJI’s virtual hearing is a small but significant step—an acknowledgment that the law, like the air, cannot be compartmentalized.

 

As Delhi grapples with its AQI and the judiciary adapts to a new normal, there is a chance to turn crisis into opportunity. By weaving environmental consciousness into the fabric of governance, we may yet write a new chapter—one where the courts are safe, the air is cleaner, and the lessons of the ozone hole are not forgotten, but applied to the very ground we walk on.

 

#DelhiAQI #AirQualityCrisis #VirtualJustice #CJI #CleanAirRights #EnvironmentalJustice #SustainableCourts #DigitalJudiciary #PollutionAlert #ClimateActionNow

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