NGT Slaps Fines on Cricket Stadiums for Groundwater Misuse, Demands STPs

The National Green Tribunal has expressed serious concern and imposed environmental compensation on several cricket stadiums across India for continuing to extract groundwater for irrigation. The tribunal noted specific stadiums, including Mohali's IS Bindra Stadium, are heavily reliant on groundwater and have not installed required Sewage Treatment Plants. It also fined twelve cricket associations for failing to submit mandatory compliance reports on their water usage. The associations have been given six weeks to explain their groundwater use and the case will be heard next in April 2026.

Key Points: NGT Fines Cricket Stadiums Over Groundwater Extraction

  • NGT fines stadiums for groundwater misuse
  • Stadiums failed to shift to treated sewage water
  • IS Bindra Stadium uses 6000KL groundwater monthly
  • 12 associations fined Rs 5000 for no reports
  • Next hearing scheduled for April 2026
3 min read

NGT issues fresh directions, imposes environmental compensation over groundwater misuse by cricket stadiums

NGT imposes environmental compensation on cricket stadiums for misusing groundwater. Stadiums in Mohali, Kolkata, Nagpur, and others directed to explain non-compliance.

"serious adverse impact on the environment - National Green Tribunal"

New Delhi, January 31

The National Green Tribunal, Principal Bench, New Delhi, has expressed serious concern over the continued groundwater extraction by several cricket stadiums across the country to irrigate cricket grounds, despite earlier directions to shift to treated sewage water.

The Tribunal has directed erring cricket associations to explain their non-compliance and imposed environmental compensation on those who failed to submit mandatory reports.

A Bench headed by Justice Prakash Shrivastava, Chairperson, along with Expert Member A Senthil Vel, while hearing Execution Application connected with Original Application, noted that the Central Ground Water Authority (CGWA) had filed a consolidated compilation on January 20, detailing water usage practices of various cricket stadiums across India.

The Tribunal observed that, despite repeated directions issued on November 26, 2024, and July 17, 2025, several cricket associations continue to rely on groundwater for irrigation and have either failed to install Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs) or are not utilising treated water, even when it is available.

Noting the IS Bindra Stadium in Mohali, operated by the Punjab Cricket Association, the Bench recorded that the stadium uses approximately 6,000 kilolitres of groundwater per month for irrigation and has not installed an STP. Rejecting the plea that treated water was unavailable, the Tribunal relied on official communications showing that both secondary- and tertiary-treated water are available from nearby sewage treatment plants and can be accessed upon payment.

The Tribunal observed that the continued use of groundwater in such circumstances indicates a clear reluctance to comply with environmental directions and has a "serious adverse impact on the environment".

The Bench further noted that similar groundwater dependence has been disclosed in respect of Jamtha Stadium, Nagpur; Eden Gardens, Kolkata; Chaudhary Bansi Lal Cricket Stadium, Lahli (Haryana); Karyavattom Sports Facilities Limited, Kerala; and ACA Stadium, Baraspara, Guwahati. These stadiums have been granted six weeks to provide explanations justifying groundwater use and to disclose the steps taken to date to avoid such extraction.

The Tribunal also took strong exception to the failure of twelve cricket associations to submit compliance reports altogether, despite repeated opportunities. These include prominent stadiums such as Arun Jaitley Stadium (Delhi), MCA Stadium Gahunje (Pune), Sawai Mansingh Stadium (Jaipur), Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium (Hyderabad), and others.

Holding that such non-compliance had delayed adjudication, the Tribunal imposed costs of Rs 5,000 each on all twelve defaulting associations, to be deposited with the Secretary, NGT Bar Association, within two weeks.

Subject to the deposit of costs, the defaulting associations have been granted six weeks to submit their replies to the CGWA.

The matter has been directed to be listed next on April 16, 2026, for further consideration.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As a cricket fan, this is disappointing. Our beloved stadiums should lead by example. Eden Gardens, Wankhede, Chinnaswamy... these are icons. They must adopt sustainable practices. The BCCI is the richest board, surely they can fund STPs for all major venues? 🏏
A
Aman W
Good move by NGT. But will it be enforced? We see so many orders that are just ignored. The problem is the "chalta hai" attitude. 6000 kilolitres per month in Mohali is insane! That's drinking water for thousands of families. Shameful.
S
Sarah B
I appreciate the NGT taking a stand. However, I hope the focus remains on constructive solutions and helping these stadiums transition, not just penalties. Maybe the government could offer subsidies or fast-track approvals for STP installation to encourage compliance.
K
Karthik V
Why is there always non-compliance until a tribunal cracks the whip? These associations have lawyers and consultants. They knew the rules. This is pure negligence. The next hearing is in 2026? That's too far away. The groundwater will be further depleted by then.
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Nisha Z
This isn't just about cricket. It's about respecting our natural resources. In cities like Delhi and Chennai, we know the water crisis firsthand. Using treated sewage water is a perfect solution - it's available and underutilized. Hope all stadiums act responsibly now. 🙏

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