ON APRIL 23, 2026, the National Green Tribunal (‘NGT’) issued show cause notices to several major cricket stadiums hosting Indian Premier League (‘IPL’) cricket matches, asking why their activities should not be stopped in light of their alleged violation of its earlier order banning the use of groundwater for stadium upkeep.
Background
The NGT notices need to be seen and analysed in light of a Public Interest Litigation (‘PIL’) decided in 2016 by the Bombay High Court. The PIL filed by Loksatta, an organisation that focuses on democratic and institutional reforms, challenged the Board of Control of Cricket Associations (‘BCCI’) and the Cricket Associations (‘CAs’) of Mumbai, Pune and Nagpur’s use of sixty lakh litres of water for maintenance of IPL matches during a time of drought in Maharashtra when farmers were committing suicides owing to crop failures.
The BCCI defended the use of groundwater, arguing that Maharashtra generates hundred crore rupees from the IPL and that staging the tournament outside the country would inflict a significant blow to India’s GDP. The PIL framed the issue as the unfair allocation of water noting that the use of water for maintenance of cricket pitches during a time of extreme water scarcity was violative of Articles 21 (right to life) and 47 (duty of the state to ensure good nutrition). The High Court judgment, which the Supreme Court (‘SC’) upheld, resulted in shifting of thirteen of these twenty matches outside Maharashtra. The NGT’s notices should not be seen as merely routine matters rather it should be analysed as a contestation of two viewpoints that influence decision-making relating to uses and users of water: water as an economic good and the human right to water.
Criteria for allocation of water
While deciding uses and users, the ground of contestation is weighing in the human right dimension as compared to the economic or industrial rationale of treating water as an economic good. There is increasing recognition in most parts of the world that water is essential for living with dignity as it sustains activities like drinking, food production and hygiene and some water is essential for maintaining the ecosystem. Since other rights cannot be realized without access to safe water, it has been argued that water has been implicitly considered a fundamental right under the original Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948). The guarantee of basic fundamental rights provided in the Indian Constitution is furthered in National Water Policy documents of 1987, 2002, and 2012, which accord the highest priority to drinking water and domestic consumption in terms of water allocation. This implies, arguably, that the above-mentioned uses will have priority over the economic use of water. Even in the case of international watercourse, for instance, Article 10(2) of the United Nations Water Convention, 1997 requires special regard to be given to the requirements of vital human needs by the parties to resolve the conflict between different uses of watercourse.
Scholars have pointed out that the implementation of the human right to water has not been consistent in India due to the increasing influence of a neoliberal view of water. There are elite biases in the functioning of the State, with the poor being excluded from the basic services of having some water for dignified living. The Indian State is found to be engaged in balancing a constitutional commitment of treating water as a human right with a neoliberal perspective which treats water as an economic commodity.
Since other rights cannot be realized without access to safe water, water has been implicitly considered a fundamental right under the original Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948).
In search of a solution
Given that India’s groundwater aquifers are being dangerously depleted and polluted, India needs groundwater reforms urgently to protect its growing population’s basic water requirement and its growing number of groundwater irrigation structures such as wells and tube wells. The unpredictability posed by climate change to surface waters, people increasingly rely on groundwater resources.
Since the misuse of groundwater by the stadiums in both the proceedings has been challenged, it is important that the archaic nineteenth century Indian Easements Act 1882, which links groundwater ownership to land ownership, be revisited. In other words, the Act grants absolute rights to extract beneath their property.
This Act, heavily tilted in favour of private ownership of the resources, does not allow realization of basic minimum water to a large number of people to meet a dignified living. Moreover, it fails to provide the basis for satisfactory protection of groundwater at aquifer level. The changes in the groundwater law must incorporate a new set of principles that recognize the common pool nature of groundwater resource, its importance in realizing the human right to water, participatory management with the help of local authorities, and the need for a strong aquifer protection regime.
Unlike surface water, groundwater is still waiting to be considered as a public trust resource by the SC. The Court’s recognition would allow citizens to challenge the State to enforce the public’s rights when it fails to protect groundwater from significant damage, and push the agenda of groundwater reform in India. The NGT must underline the need of extending public trust doctrine to cover groundwater.
Since the misuse of groundwater by the stadiums has been challenged, it is important that the archaic nineteenth century Indian Easements Act 1882, which links groundwater ownership to land ownership, be revisited.
The example has been set by the Hawaii Supreme Court in the United States, which explicitly ruled in Hawaii Waiahole Ditch Case (2000) that public trust doctrine applies to all water resources, including groundwater. The public trust doctrine by its very nature does not remain static but must conform to the changing needs and circumstances. The model set by this judgment served as a model for other states such as Montana, Illinois, and New York to include groundwater as a public trust resource.
India’s latest Model Groundwater Bill, 2017 takes into consideration protecting aquifers, treating water as a public trust, and prioritizing drinking water. Despite the complexity involved in bypassing the nineteenth century rule, the Indian government must seek guidance from a modern reasoned view to protect and preserve groundwater resources and avoid catastrophic outcomes.