Supreme Court agrees to examine SHANTI Act plea in July

The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed to hear in July a challenge to the SHANTI Act 2025 while observing that capping liability of private operators in nuclear incidents is a fiscal policy matter beyond judicial second-guessing.

A bench led by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant, along with Justices Joymalya Bagchi and Vipul M Pancholi, made the observations during a public interest litigation filed by former bureaucrat EAS Sarma. The petition questions provisions that limit private operator liability to as low as ₹100 crore and the government's residual liability to around ₹3,000 crore.

Advocate Prashant Bhushan, appearing for the petitioners, argued that the caps could compromise safety standards and cited the Chernobyl and Fukushima disasters where damages ran into hundreds of billions of dollars. The bench responded that the Act does not remove the power of constitutional courts to determine victim compensation.

The court noted that nuclear energy remains a necessity for development and that higher liability caps might deter foreign investment. It will take up the matter again in July to address concerns over regulatory independence and public safety.

संबंधित लेख

Illustration of Supreme Court justices hearing the Twisha Sharma case.
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Supreme Court takes suo motu cognizance of Twisha Sharma case, hearing on May 25

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The Supreme Court has taken suo motu cognizance of the death of Twisha Sharma. A bench led by Chief Justice Surya Kant will hear the matter on May 25.

A high-powered US nuclear executive mission is set to visit India later this month, six months after landmark legislation opened the sector. The delegation will assess the nuclear energy landscape and explore opportunities. Meetings are lined up in New Delhi and Mumbai.

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India's Supreme Court indicated on Wednesday that uniform guidelines on judicial intervention in faith and rights disputes are neither feasible nor desirable, preferring case-by-case assessments. The observation came during the seventh day of hearings on the Sabarimala Temple entry reference.

A nine-judge Supreme Court bench stated on Wednesday that courts cannot hollow out religion in the name of reform and logic may not be the right tool to examine faith and belief systems. The remarks came on the second day of hearing a reference from the 2018 Sabarimala judgment. The Centre disagreed on courts deciding religious practices as superstition.

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Vedanta group chairman Anil Agrawal and others have been named in an FIR for causing death by negligence in a power plant blast in Chhattisgarh's Sakti district two days ago. Sakti Superintendent of Police Prafull Thakur confirmed this on Thursday.

India's Chief Justice Surya Kant stated that the quality of the legal system will play a crucial role in achieving a $10 trillion economy. He made these remarks at the 'National Rule of Law Convention 2026'. He emphasized strengthening the rule of law and building investor trust.

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The Supreme Court on Tuesday directed that existing ethanol supply allocations for ESY 2025-26 remain unchanged. The interim order came while hearing a plea by BPCL challenging a Karnataka High Court ruling. The decision affects India’s ethanol-blending programme.

 

 

 

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