Supreme Court
The Supreme Court has ruled that cutting a large number of trees is worse than killing human beings, while imposing a fine of ₹1 lakh per tree on a man who illegally felled 454 trees in the protected Taj Trapezium Zone.
A bench of Justices Abhay S Oka and Ujjal Bhuyan rejected the plea of Shiv Shankar Agarwal, who had chopped down trees in Mathura-Vrindavan’s Dalmia Farms. The court emphasized:
"It will take at least 100 years to regenerate the green cover lost."
"There should be no mercy in environmental cases."
The Supreme Court upheld the recommendation of the Central Empowered Committee (CEC), ordering Agarwal to pay ₹1 lakh per tree, totaling ₹4.54 crore. While his lawyer, Mukul Rohatgi, admitted the mistake and sought a reduction in the fine, the court refused any leniency.
To mitigate the damage, the bench directed that Agarwal plant new trees at a designated site. The contempt plea against him will be disposed of only after compliance.
In a significant move, the court reversed its 2019 order, reinstating the requirement for prior permission to cut trees on private and non-forest lands within the Taj Trapezium Zone.
This ruling underscores the judiciary’s firm stance on environmental protection, particularly in ecologically sensitive zones.