Table of Contents
Using RTI to Know About Pollution, Water Quality, and Environmental Actions in Your Area
In one line. Air, water, and noise are measured by the Central and State Pollution Control Boards. Environmental clearances are granted by the MoEFCC and State Environment Impact Assessment Authorities. Both hold records — and RTI gives any citizen access to those records in 30 days.
What that means in practice.
- You get the actual AQI / PM2.5 / PM10 readings for the station near you.
- You get the effluent test reports for the factory upstream of your village.
- You get the Environmental Clearance (EC) conditions for a new project.
Did you know? Under Section 4(1)(b) of the RTI Act and the MoEFCC's own circulars, Environmental Clearances and Monitoring Reports are expected to be proactively on the public domain. An RTI is simply the legal trigger for what should already be online.
Why this matters
Environmental harm is usually slow and invisible. A dug-up riverbed, a chimney emitting at night, a factory discharging to a drain — the damage accumulates quietly. Data exists — regulators measure, inspectors write, laboratories report — but it does not reach the neighbourhood it affects.
RTI bridges that gap.
What information you can ask
- Ambient air-quality monitoring data for your district.
- Water sample test reports for a specific river / lake / borewell.
- Consent to Operate (CTO) and Consent to Establish (CTE) of an industry.
- Effluent Treatment Plant (ETP) performance data.
- Environmental Clearance (EC) order and its 11 standard conditions.
- Compliance reports submitted by the project proponent.
- Pollution Control Board inspection reports.
- Show-cause notices, closure directions, and bank guarantees invoked.
- Solid-waste management plan of your municipality.
- Forest clearance and compensatory afforestation records.
When to use RTI
- Suspected untreated discharge into a river / drain.
- Frequent chimney smoke at odd hours.
- A quarry / stone-crusher / brick kiln near a village.
- A construction site flouting air-pollution norms.
- A new project claiming “cleared” — you want to see the conditions.
- Noise from a factory during school / night hours.
- A water-borne illness cluster in the neighbourhood.
Whom to ask
- Air, water, noise, and factory compliance: State Pollution Control Board (SPCB).
- National data, CPCB standards, inter-state rivers: Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB).
- Environmental Clearance for new projects: MoEFCC (category A) or State EIAA (category B).
- Forest / Wildlife: State Forest Department / MoEFCC.
- Municipal waste: Urban Local Body.
- Groundwater: Central / State Ground Water Authority.
Step-by-step filing
Online
rtionline.gov.infor MoEFCC, CPCB, NGT.- State RTI portal for SPCB, Forest Department, Municipal ULB.
Offline
- Address to the PIO of the specific Board / Department.
- Rs. 10 IPO / DD (BPL free).
- Speed Post with acknowledgement.
Sample RTI application
To, The Public Information Officer, [State Pollution Control Board / CPCB / MoEFCC / State EIAA], [Address] Subject: Information under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, regarding environmental monitoring and compliance in [Location / Industry / Project]. Sir/Madam, I, [Full Name], citizen of India and resident of [Full Address], submit the following request: Location / Industry / Project: ________ Ward / Village / District: ________ Period of interest: [DD-MM-YYYY] to [DD-MM-YYYY] Please provide: 1. Ambient air-quality monitoring data (PM2.5, PM10, SO₂, NO₂, CO, O₃) for the nearest monitoring station(s) during the above period, with station code and methodology. 2. Water-quality test reports for the nearest surface water body (river / lake / canal) and groundwater samples, with parameters (BOD, COD, pH, coliform, heavy metals) and dates. 3. Consent to Establish (CTE) and Consent to Operate (CTO) granted to [Industry Name, Unit Address], with the validity period and conditions. 4. Latest Compliance / Self-Monitoring Report (SMR) submitted by the industry, and the SPCB's verification. 5. Environmental Clearance (EC) order for [Project Name] — date of grant, EC conditions, and monitoring plan. 6. Last three inspection reports of the industry / project by the SPCB / Regional Office. 7. Any show-cause notice, closure direction, or bank-guarantee invocation issued against the industry in the last 24 months, with dates and current status. 8. Effluent Treatment Plant performance parameters — inlet and outlet values — as on the latest record. 9. Forest / Wildlife clearance, if applicable, with the compensatory afforestation plan and the progress thereof. 10. Grievance redressal officer of the Board for environmental complaints from the public, with contact details. I enclose Indian Postal Order No. __________ dated __________ for Rs. 10. I declare that I am an Indian citizen. Yours faithfully, [Full Name] [Signature] [Date] [Place]
Ten powerful environment RTI questions
- Air-quality data with station code.
- Water-sample reports.
- CTE and CTO.
- Self-monitoring reports.
- EC conditions and compliance.
- Inspection reports.
- Show-cause / closure directions.
- ETP / STP data.
- Forest clearance and afforestation.
- Grievance officer contact.
What happens after you file
- Day 0–15: SPCB pulls station logs and lab reports.
- Day 15–30: In many cases, an RTI triggers a fresh inspection of the industry or monitoring station.
- Day 30: Reply with the data.
- Day 31+: First Appeal to the Board's FAA.
- Day 60+: Second Appeal to the SIC.
Citizen-led awareness — what to do with the data
- Share with the ward RWA / gram sabha.
- Upload to a public spreadsheet with peer communities.
- Send summary to the District Collector if violations are clear.
- Approach the National Green Tribunal (NGT) with the RTI reply as documentary evidence.
- Invite the local school into a clean-air / clean-water project based on the data.
Common mistakes
- Asking for “all pollution data in the state”. Narrow down.
- Not specifying the industry's exact address.
- Confusing CPCB with SPCB — most routine work is with SPCB.
- Missing the 30-day appeal window.
Pro tips
- Pair the RTI with a photograph of the chimney / outfall; it speeds up inspection.
- Use two parallel RTIs — one to SPCB, one to the ULB, when both have jurisdiction (solid waste, wet waste, construction debris).
- Subscribe to CPCB NAMP public dashboards; RTI fills in the gaps.
FAQs
Q1. Can I RTI a private factory?
No — directly. But you can RTI the SPCB, MoEFCC, or the forest department, which regulates the factory. Their files include the factory's data.
Q2. Are environmental clearance reports online?
Many are, on parivesh.nic.in. But compliance reports and local monitoring are often only on file. RTI bridges the gap.
Q3. Can I ask for the contact of the industry's CEO?
No — that is personal information under Section 8(1)(j).
Q4. I am worried about my health. Can RTI get faster replies?
Yes. Under Section 7(1) proviso, if life or liberty is at risk, the reply must come in 48 hours. Invoke this in the application.
Q5. What if the SPCB denies data citing Section 8(1)(d) (commercial confidence)?
That exemption rarely applies to pollution data. Cite Mandate 2015, CIC on the subject. Most denials crumble on First Appeal.
Conclusion
A clean river, breathable air, silent nights — these are not luxuries. They are public goods. When citizens ask the regulators the right questions, the regulators regulate. When citizens don't ask, the silence is mistaken for consent.
RTI is the citizen's microphone in the environmental conversation. Use it with care, and with the school, the RWA, the gram sabha as your audience.
Related reading
Last reviewed: 21 April 2026. References verified against the Water Act, 1974, Air Act, 1981, Environment Protection Act, 1986, and MoEFCC EIA Notification, 2006.


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