
THE ENVIRONMENT (PROTECTION) ACT, 1986
ACT NO. 29 OF1986
1. Section 12(1)(b) empowers the Central Government to:
a. Close laboratories
b. Recognise laboratories or institutes
c. Penalise laboratories
d. Transfer laboratories
2. Recognised laboratories under Section 12 must carry out:
a. Judicial functions
b. Administrative functions
c. Functions entrusted under this Act
d. State Government functions
3. Recognition of laboratories must be done through:
a. Written permission
b. Court order
c. Notification in the Official Gazette
d. Agreement
4. Section 12 allows recognition of:
a. Only government laboratories
b. Only private laboratories
c. Laboratories or institutes
d. Foreign laboratories
5. Section 12(2) empowers the Central Government to:
a. Issue penalties
b. Frame rules
c. Appoint analysts
d. Hear appeals
6. Rules under Section 12(2) must be made by:
a. Order
b. Circular
c. Notification in the Official Gazette
d. Resolution
7. Rules may specify the functions of:
a. Government Analysts
b. Pollution Control Boards
c. Environmental laboratories
d. Courts
8. Section 12(2)(b) deals with procedure for submission of:
a. Complaints
b. Appeals
c. Samples for analysis or tests
d. Reports to courts
9. Samples submitted to environmental laboratories may include:
a. Only air and water
b. Only soil
c. Air, water, soil or other substance
d. Only hazardous substances
10. Rules under Section 12 may prescribe the form of:
a. Charge-sheet
b. Laboratory report
c. Appeal memorandum
d. Government order
11. Fees payable for laboratory reports are:
a. Fixed by courts
b. Fixed by State Government
c. Prescribed by rules
d. Discretionary
12. Section 12(2)(c) covers:
a. Punishment provisions
b. Any other necessary or expedient matters
c. Appeals procedure
d. Offences
13. Environmental laboratories function primarily to support:
a. Judicial review
b. Environmental enforcement
c. Legislative process
d. Administrative appeals
14. Section 12 provides statutory backing to:
a. Sample collection
b. Scientific testing and analysis
c. Arrest procedure
d. Cognizance of offences
15. Section 12 is closely connected with which section?
a. Section 5
b. Section 7
c. Section 11
d. Section 19
16. Recognition under Section 12 allows a laboratory to:
a. Issue penalties
b. Conduct legal proceedings
c. Perform statutory analysis functions
d. Frame rules
17. Without recognition under Section 12, a laboratory report:
a. Is automatically valid
b. Has no statutory backing
c. Becomes final evidence
d. Is binding on courts
18. Section 12 strengthens which aspect of environmental law?
a. Preventive
b. Punitive
c. Scientific and evidentiary
d. Appellate
19. Environmental laboratories under Section 12 are established for:
a. Research only
b. Enforcement assistance
c. Administrative convenience
d. Revenue collection
20. The power under Section 12 is:
a. Mandatory
b. Judicial
c. Discretionary
d. Penal
21. Section 12 ensures reliability of:
a. Directions under Section 5
b. Environmental standards
c. Sample analysis results
d. Penalty orders
22. The phrase “one or more” in Section 12 indicates:
a. Limitation
b. Flexibility
c. Restriction
d. Delegation
23. Environmental laboratories under this Act operate under:
a. State control
b. Judicial supervision
c. Central Government framework
d. Local authority control
24. Section 12 complements which principle of environmental law?
a. Absolute liability
b. Polluter pays
c. Evidence-based regulation
d. Precautionary principle
25. Rules framed under Section 12 help in:
a. Uniform testing standards
b. Reducing litigation
c. Increasing penalties
d. Limiting appeals
26. The main objective of Section 12 is to:
a. Regulate industries
b. Create appellate mechanism
c. Provide scientific infrastructure for enforcement
d. Fix liability
27. Section 13 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 relates to:
a. Environmental laboratories
b. Government Analysts
c. Powers of inspection
d. Penalties
28. Who is empowered to appoint or recognise Government Analysts under Section 13?
a. State Government
b. Pollution Control Board
c. Central Government
d. National Green Tribunal
29. Appointment or recognition of Government Analysts is done through:
a. Circular
b. Administrative order
c. Notification in the Official Gazette
d. Parliamentary enactment
30. Government Analysts under Section 13 must possess:
a. Judicial experience
b. Prescribed qualifications
c. Administrative seniority
d. Political appointment
31. Government Analysts are appointed for the purpose of analysis of:
a. Hazardous waste only
b. Industrial effluents only
c. Air, water, soil or other substance
d. Chemicals only
32. Samples analysed by Government Analysts are sent to:
a. Courts
b. Police stations
c. Environmental laboratories
d. Pollution Control Boards
33. Environmental laboratories referred in Section 13 are those:
a. Established by State Government
b. Recognised by courts
c. Established or recognised under Section 12
d. Privately owned laboratories
34. Section 13 provides statutory authority to:
a. Inspect industries
b. Analyse environmental samples
c. Prosecute offenders
d. Issue directions
35. Government Analysts under this Act function mainly in a:
a. Judicial capacity
b. Executive capacity
c. Scientific and technical capacity
d. Advisory capacity
36. Appointment of Government Analysts under Section 13 is:
a. Mandatory
b. Discretionary with Central Government
c. Based on State recommendation only
d. Temporary in nature
37. The phrase “recognise such persons” in Section 13 implies:
a. Only government officers can be appointed
b. Only judges can be appointed
c. Even non-government experts may be recognized
d. Only State officials are eligible
38. The primary function of a Government Analyst is connected with:
a. Enforcement
b. Investigation
c. Scientific analysis
d. Adjudication
39. Section 13 supports which earlier section of the Act?
a. Section 5
b. Section 7
c. Section 11
d. Section 19
40. Without appointment under Section 13, analysis of samples:
a. Is optional
b. Has no evidentiary value
c. Is administrative only
d. Is valid in all cases
41. Government Analysts are appointed for analysis of samples sent:
a. Directly by courts
b. By private persons
c. Under statutory procedure
d. By NGOs
42. Section 13 ensures reliability of:
a. Search and seizure
b. Inspection reports
c. Sample analysis
d. Penalty orders
43. Qualifications of Government Analysts are:
a. Fixed in the Act
b. Prescribed by rules
c. Decided by courts
d. Mentioned in the Constitution
44. Government Analysts work in coordination with:
a. Adjudicating officers
b. Environmental laboratories
c. National Green Tribunal
d. State legislatures
45. Section 13 strengthens which principle of environmental law?
a. Absolute liability
b. Precautionary principle
c. Scientific assessment
d. Polluter pays principle
46. Analysis by Government Analysts under Section 13 is essential for:
a. Grant of licences
b. Environmental clearance
c. Legal proceedings under the Act
d. Administrative review
47. Government Analysts are appointed “for the purpose of analysis” of samples:
a. Collected illegally
b. Collected under Section 11
c. Collected by police
d. Collected by NGOs
48. Section 13 ensures objectivity by requiring analysts to be:
a. Politically appointed
b. Judicially trained
c. Technically qualified
d. Administratively senior
49. Government Analysts provide support mainly to:
a. Legislative framework
b. Judicial interpretation
c. Scientific enforcement mechanism
d. Administrative discretion
50. Appointment of Government Analysts is published to ensure:
a. Confidentiality
b. Transparency and legality
c. Speedy trial
d. Administrative convenience
51. Section 13 read with Section 12 forms the basis of:
a. Penal provisions
b. Appellate mechanism
c. Scientific evidence system
d. Administrative control
52. Section 14 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 deals with:
a. Appointment of Government Analysts
b. Powers of inspection
c. Reports of Government Analysts
d. Environmental laboratories
53. A document under Section 14 must be:
a. Certified by court
b. Notarised
c. Purporting to be a report signed by a Government Analyst
d. Approved by Pollution Control Board
54. The legal value of a report under Section 14 is that it:
a. Is advisory in nature
b. Has no evidentiary value
c. May be used as evidence
d. Requires further proof in all cases
55. Reports of Government Analysts can be used as evidence in:
a. Civil suits only
b. Criminal trials only
c. Any proceeding under this Act
d. Proceedings under IPC only
56. Section 14 gives evidentiary status to reports prepared by:
a. Environmental laboratories
b. Government Analysts
c. Inspecting officers
d. Pollution Control Boards
57. For admissibility under Section 14, the report must be:
a. Countersigned by a Magistrate
b. Signed by a Government Analyst
c. Verified by an advocate
d. Approved by the Central Government
58. The expression “may be used as evidence” indicates that the report is:
a. Mandatory proof
b. Conclusive proof
c. Statutorily admissible evidence
d. Irrelevant to proceedings
59. Section 14 removes the necessity of calling:
a. Judges
b. Environmental officers
c. Government Analysts as witnesses in every case
d. Accused persons
60. Section 14 strengthens which aspect of enforcement?
a. Administrative discretion
b. Scientific evidence
c. Judicial review
d. Executive control
61. Reports admissible under Section 14 relate to analysis of:
a. Only water samples
b. Only air samples
c. Samples analysed under the Act
d. Private laboratory samples
62. Section 14 operates in conjunction with which section?
a. Section 5
b. Section 7
c. Section 11
d. Section 19
63. A report unsigned by a Government Analyst:
a. Is fully admissible
b. Is inadmissible under Section 14
c. Is admissible with court permission
d. Becomes valid after verification
64. Section 14 applies to proceedings which are:
a. Administrative only
b. Judicial only
c. Statutory proceedings under the Act
d. Legislative proceedings
65. The evidentiary value under Section 14 is given to:
a. Oral statements
b. Inspection notes
c. Documentary reports
d. Government notifications
66. Reports under Section 14 are primarily based on:
a. Assumptions
b. Technical opinion
c. Scientific analysis
d. Administrative findings
67. Section 14 ensures that environmental offences are proved using:
a. Circumstantial evidence
b. Confessions
c. Scientific data
d. Administrative orders
68. The phrase “purporting to be” indicates that the document:
a. Must be original only
b. Must be handwritten
c. Appears on its face to be a valid report
d. Must be notarized
69. Section 14 helps in expediting trials by:
a. Avoiding lengthy investigations
b. Eliminating need for laboratory testing
c. Reducing procedural delays in proving reports
d. Preventing appeals
70. Government Analyst reports under Section 14 are primarily used to establish:
a. Mens rea
b. Environmental damage
c. Existence of pollutants and standards breach
d. Administrative fault
71. Section 14 embodies which principle?
a. Natural justice
b. resumption of innocence
c. Reliance on expert evidence
d. Judicial activism
72. The admissibility of reports under Section 14 is:
a. Discretionary with State Government
b. Automatic under the Act
c. Dependent on police verification
d. Subject to consent of accused
73. Section 14 avoids duplication of evidence by recognising:
a. Inspector’s report
b. Government Analyst’s report
c. PCB records
d. NGO reports
74. Reports under Section 14 are relevant in proceedings relating to:
a. Compensation only
b. Penalties and prosecutions
c. Administrative transfers
d. Service matters
75. Section 14 ensures credibility of evidence because Government Analysts are:
a. Politically appointed
b. Technically qualified
c. Judicial officers
d. Administrative heads
76. Section 14 read with Section 13 creates a framework for:
a. Appointment and appeal
b. Inspection and seizure
c. Expert scientific evidence
d. Administrative supervision
77. Section 14A of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 relates to:
a. Power to issue directions
b. Appeal to Tribunal
c. Penalty for contravention of section 7 or section 8
d. Reports of Government Analysts
78. Penalty under Section 14A is imposed for contravention of:
a. Sections 5 and 6
b. Sections 7 and 8
c. Sections 9 and 10
d. Sections 11 and 12
79. Section 14A applies when a person violates provisions relating to:
a. Environmental laboratories
b. Sampling procedure
c. Emission of pollutants and handling of hazardous substances
d. Appointment of officers
80. Minimum penalty prescribed under Section 14A(1) is:
a. Fifty thousand rupees
b. One lakh rupees
c. Five lakh rupees
d. Ten lakh rupees
81. Maximum penalty under Section 14A(1) may extend up to:
a. Ten lakh rupees
b. Twelve lakh rupees
c. Fifteen lakh rupees
d. Twenty lakh rupees
82. Penalty under Section 14A is imposed:
a. Once for all violations
b. Only for first offence
c. In respect of each such contravention
d. Only on repeated offences
83. The phrase “each such contravention” signifies:
a. Single penalty irrespective of violations
b. Separate penalty for every violation
c. Penalty only after conviction
d. Penalty once per year
84. Section 14A(2) deals with:
a. Initial penalty
b. Appeal procedure
c. Continuing contravention
d. Compounding of offence
85. Additional penalty for continuing contravention is:
a. One lakh rupees per day
b. Twenty-five thousand rupees per day
c. Fifty thousand rupees per day
d. One lakh rupees per month
86. Additional penalty under Section 14A(2) is calculated:
a. Weekly
b. Monthly
c. For every day of continuation
d. Annually
87. Section 14A reflects which legislative intent?
a. Leniency towards industries
b. Revenue generation
c. Strict deterrence against pollution
d. Administrative convenience
88. Penalty under Section 14A is applicable to:
a. Government only
b. Companies only
c. Any person
d. Pollution Control Boards
89. Section 14A strengthens enforcement of:
a. Section 5 only
b. Section 6 only
c. Sections 7 and 8
d. Sections 9 and 10
90. Contravention of Section 7 relates to:
a. Environmental sampling
b. Emission or discharge beyond prescribed standards
c. Appointment of analysts
d. Appeal to Tribunal
91. Contravention of Section 8 relates to:
a. Inspection of premises
b. Entry and seizure
c. Handling of hazardous substances without safeguards
d. Laboratory recognition
92. Penalty under Section 14A is:
a. Criminal imprisonment only
b. Civil compensation
c. Monetary penalty
d. Administrative warning
93. Section 14A penalties are imposed:
a. Instead of imprisonment
b. In addition to other legal consequences
c. Only after court order
d. Only after appeal
94. The words “rules made thereunder” include rules framed under:
a. Section 5
b. Section 6
c. Section 7 and 8
d. Section 10
95. Section 14A came into force to:
a. Reduce burden on courts
b. Introduce administrative penalties
c. Strengthen environmental compliance
d. Replace criminal sanctions
96. Penalty under Section 14A is independent of:
a. Environmental damage
b. Duration of offence
c. Criminal prosecution
d. Daily continuation penalty
97. Section 14A ensures accountability primarily of:
a. Courts
b. Inspectors
c. Polluters
d. Analysts
98. The daily penalty under Section 14A(2) is imposed when:
a. Contravention is accidental
b. Contravention is repeated after compliance
c. Contravention continues after initial violation
d. Appeal is pending
99. Section 14A introduces which enforcement model?
a. Preventive
b. Advisory
c. unitive with deterrence
d. Voluntary compliance
100. The monetary limits under Section 14A indicate:
a. Discretionary penalties
b. Fixed penalties
c. Minimum and maximum statutory penalties
d. Negotiated penalties
101. Section 14A primarily protects:
a. Industrial growth
b. Administrative efficiency
c. Environmental quality and public health
d. Government revenue
102. Section 14B of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 provides for:
a. Cognizance of offences
b. Penalty for contravention of Sections 9, 10 and 11
c. Power to issue directions
d. Appointment of adjudicating officer
103. Section 14B becomes applicable when a person:
a. Emits pollutants beyond standards
b. Contravenes Sections 9, 10 or 11
c. Violates Section 7 only
d. Fails to pay compensation
104. Section 14B also applies to violation of:
a. Rules only
b. Guidelines issued by courts
c. Orders or directions issued under Sections 9, 10 and 11
d. State notifications
105. Minimum penalty prescribed under Section 14B(1) is:
a. ₹5,000
b. ₹10,000
c. ₹25,000
d. ₹1,00,000
106. Maximum penalty under Section 14B(1) may extend up to:
a. ₹2 lakh
b. ₹3 lakh
c. ₹5 lakh
d. ₹10 lakh
107. Penalty under Section 14B is imposed:
a. Once for all violations
b. Only for first offence
c. In respect of each contravention
d. Only after conviction
108. Section 14B(2) deals with:
a. Appeal against penalty
b. Recovery of penalty
c. Continuing contravention
d. Cognizance of offence
109. Additional penalty for continuing contravention is:
a. ₹5,000 per day
b. ₹10,000 per day
c. ₹25,000 per day
d. ₹50,000 per day
110. Daily additional penalty under Section 14B(2) is calculated:
a. From date of appeal
b. From date of conviction
c. For every day the contravention continues
d. After final recovery
111. Section 14B applies to:
a. Companies only
b. Government departments only
c. Any person
d. Pollution Control Boards
112. Section 9 of the Act primarily relates to:
a. Entry and inspection
b. Furnishing of information in case of accidental pollution
c. Sampling of pollutants
d. Environmental laboratories
113. Section 10 of the Act deals with:
a. Appeals
b. Powers of entry and inspection
c. Penalty provisions
d. Environmental Fund
114. Section 11 of the Act is concerned with:
a. Emission standards
b. Hazardous substances
c. Power to take sample and procedure
d. Appointment of officers
115. Failure to assist an inspecting officer under Section 10 may attract penalty under:
a. Section 14
b. Section 14A
c. Section 14B
d. Section 15
116. Penalty under Section 14B is:
a. Imprisonment only
b. Monetary only
c. Warning only
d. Civil liability only
117. Section 14B reflects which environmental principle?
a. Sustainable development
b. Absolute liability
c. Polluter Pays Principle
d. Public trust doctrine
118. Section 14B penalties are applicable even if contravention is:
a. Accidental
b. Intentional only
c. Repeated only
d. After warning
119. The phrase “does not comply” under Section 14B indicates:
a. Partial compliance
b. Failure to obey statutory provisions
c. Minor procedural lapse
d. Delay in filing reports
120. Section 14B strengthens enforcement of:
a. Preventive measures only
b. Procedural and compliance provisions
c. Policy guidelines
d. Environmental education
121. The objective of daily additional penalty under Section 14B is to:
a. Increase government revenue
b. Compensate victims
c. Deter prolonged non-compliance
d. Replace imprisonment
122. Section 14B penalties are independent of:
a. Environmental damage
b. Criminal prosecution
c. Daily contravention
d. Statutory duty
123. Penalty under Section 14B may be imposed:
a. Only once
b. Only after appeal
c. For each separate violation
d. Only by court
124. Section 14B was introduced to ensure compliance mainly with:
a. Emission standards
b. Emergency response, inspection and sampling provisions
c. Environmental Fund provisions
d. Rule-making powers
125. The nature of liability under Section 14B is:
a. Criminal
b. Civil
c. Administrative monetary penalty
d. Disciplinary
126. Section 14B applies when contravention occurs under:
a. Sections 7 and 8
b. Sections 9, 10 and 11
c. Sections 12 and 13
d. Sections 15 and 16
127. Section 15 deals with penalty for:
a. Contravention of Sections 7 and 8
b. Contravention of Sections 9, 10, 11
c. Contravention of any provisions of the Act, rules, orders, or directions where no other penalty is provided
d. Non-payment to Environmental Fund
128. Minimum penalty prescribed under Section 15(1) is:
a. ₹5,000
b. ₹10,000
c. ₹50,000
d. ₹1,00,000
129. Maximum penalty under Section 15(1) may extend to:
a. ₹1 lakh
b. ₹5 lakh
c. ₹15 lakh
d. ₹20 lakh
130. Section 15(2) provides for additional penalty in case of:
a. Repeated violation of Sections 7 and 8 only
b. Continuous contravention of the Act, rules, orders, or directions
c. Non-submission of reports only
d. Failure to pay previous penalty
131. Additional penalty for each day of continuous contravention under Section 15(2) is:
a. ₹5,000
b. ₹10,000
c. ₹15,000
d. ₹50,000
132. Section 15 applies when a person contravenes:
a. Only environmental laboratory norms
b. Any provision for which no penalty is otherwise provided
c. Only emission standards
d. Only hazardous substance rules
133. Liability under Section 15 is:
a. Imprisonment only
b. Administrative monetary penalty
c. Criminal only
d. Civil liability only
134. Section 15 ensures compliance when:
a. No specific penalty exists under other provisions
b. Only minor offences are committed
c. Environmental Fund is not credited
d. Court proceedings are pending
135. Section 15 penalties are imposed on:
a. Government Departments only
b. Companies only
c. Any person
d. Pollution Control Boards only
136. The purpose of daily additional penalty under Section 15(2) is to:
a. Compensate government revenue loss
b. Deter prolonged non-compliance
c. Reward compliance
d. Punish the officer in charge only
137. Penalty under Section 15 is independent of:
a. Severity of pollution
b. Section 14A penalties
c. Continuous contravention
d. Rule compliance
138. Section 15 supports which principle of environmental law?
a. Sustainable development
b. Polluter Pays Principle
c. Precautionary Principle
d. Absolute liability
139. The phrase “does not comply” in Section 15 includes:
a. Only intentional non-compliance
b. Both intentional and unintentional non-compliance
c. Non-compliance after warning only
d. Partial compliance only
140. Penalty under Section 15 may be imposed:
a. Only once
b. For each separate contravention
c. Only by court order
d. Only after environmental damage occurs
141. Section 15(1) covers contraventions where penalty under other sections like 14A or 14B is:
a. Already applicable
b. Not provided
c. Less than ₹1 lakh
d. Only for companies
142. Continuous contravention under Section 15 includes:
a. Daily non-compliance with orders, rules or directions
b. Single instance of violation
c. Only industrial pollution
d. Non-submission of annual report only
143. Authority empowered to impose penalty under Section 15 is:
a. Central Government
b. Adjudicating officer
c. State Pollution Control Board only
d. National Green Tribunal only
144. Section 15 penalties are applicable for violation of:
a. Only rules under Environment Act
b. Only directions under Section 5
c. All provisions of the Act, rules, orders, and directions not covered elsewhere
d. Only Section 7 and 8 violations
145. Daily penalty under Section 15(2) accumulates until:
a. Violation is rectified
b. Appeal is filed
c. Court issues stay order
d. Officer submits report
146. Section 15 strengthens environmental compliance by:
a. Ensuring punishment only after pollution occurs
b. Providing monetary deterrence for all uncategorized contraventions
c. Imposing imprisonment for minor violations
d. Limiting powers of Central Government
147. Section 15A deals with penalty for:
a. Individuals violating Section 7
b. Companies contravening any provision of the Act
c. Government Departments
d. Environmental laboratories
148. Minimum penalty for a company under Section 15A(1) is:
a. ₹50,000
b. ₹1 lakh
c. 5 lakh
d. ₹10 lakh
149. Maximum penalty under Section 15A(1) may extend to:
a. ₹5 lakh
b. 10 lakh
c. ₹15 lakh
d. ₹20 lakh
150. Additional penalty for continuous contravention by a company under Section 15A(2) is:
a. ₹50,000 per day
b. ₹1 lakh per day
c. ₹10,000 per day
d. ₹5 lakh per day
151. Section 15A applies to which type of entity?
a. Only private companies
b. Only public companies
c. Any company including body corporate, firm, society or trust
d. Only Government-owned companies
152. Liability under Section 15A is for:
a. One-time contravention only
b. Each contravention of the Act
c. Violations after warning only
d. Violations of rules under Section 6 only
153. Daily additional penalty continues until:
a. Appeal is filed
b. Contravention is rectified
c. Environmental Fund is credited
d. Central Government issues notice
154. Section 15A ensures compliance with:
a. Only hazardous substance rules
b. Any provision of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986
c. Only Section 7 and 8
d. Only industrial emission standards
155. Section 15A penalties are imposed by:
a. State Government
b. Central Government
c. Adjudicating officer appointed under Section 15C
d. National Green Tribunal
156. Section 15A supports which principle of environmental law?
a. Polluter Pays Principle
b. Precautionary Principle
c. Sustainable development only
d. Absolute liability
157. If a company repeatedly violates the Act, the penalty:
a. Remains the same
b. Increases as per Section 15A(2)
c. Is waived after 10 days
d. Is limited to ₹1 lakh
158. Section 15A ensures accountability of:
a. Directors and managers only
b. The company as a separate entity
c. Government officers
d. Environmental laboratories
159. Section 15A applies even if:
a. No environmental damage occurs
b. The company follows all rules
c. Only minor non-compliance occurs
d. Contravention is intentional or unintentional
160. Section 15A is relevant for:
a. Companies handling hazardous substances
b. Companies in industrial operations
c. Any company covered under the Act
d. Only companies under State Government control
161. Section 15A(1) penalty is charged per:
a. Day of contravention
b. Contravention
c. Notification issued
d. Environmental Fund transaction
162. Additional penalty under Section 15A(2) is aimed at:
a. Compensating officers
b. Deter prolonged non-compliance
c. Reducing Central Government workload
d. Rewarding compliance
163. The minimum total penalty for a company that continuously contravenes for 5 days would be:
a. ₹5 lakh
b. ₹6 lakh
c. ₹10 lakh
d.₹15 lakh
164. Section 15A ensures compliance by companies through:
a. Imprisonment
b. Monetary penalty
c. Both imprisonment and penalty
d. Warnings only
165. Section 15A is applicable to:
a. Only manufacturing companies
b. Any company irrespective of industry
c. Only government-owned companies
d. Only environmental labs
166. Penalty under Section 15A is separate from:
a. Penalty under Section 14A, 14B, and 15
b. Income tax
c. Labor law penalties
d. Criminal prosecution only
167. Section 15B deals with penalty for:
a. Companies violating environmental rules
b. Individuals in private sector
c. Government Departments contravening provisions of the Act
d. Environmental laboratories
168. Penalty for the Head of a Government Department under Section 15B(1) is:
a. Two months’ basic salary
b. One month’s basic salary
c. Fixed ₹1 lakh
d. Depends on environmental damage
169. A Head of Department is not liable if:
a. He exercises all due diligence to prevent contravention
b. Contravention occurs without his knowledge or instructions
c. Both a and b
d. None of the above
170. Section 15B applies to which Government Departments?
a. Only Central Government
b. Only State Government
c. Both Central and State Government
d. Only Municipal Authorities
171. If an officer other than the Head is responsible for contravention, the penalty is:
a. One month’s basic salary
b. Two months’ basic salary
c. Ten thousand rupees
d. Fifteen lakh rupees
172. An officer other than Head can avoid liability if:
a. He proves exercise of all due diligence to prevent the contravention
b. He notifies the public
c. Contravention was minor
d. Head of Department approves
173. Section 15B ensures accountability of:
a. Companies
b. Individuals in private industry
c. Heads of Departments and officers under them
d. Environmental Analysts
174. The penalty under Section 15B is calculated based on:
a. Environmental damage caused
b. Duration of contravention
c. Basic salary of the officer or Head of Department
d. Market value of pollutants
175. If contravention occurs due to instructions of the Head of Department, liability:
a. Remains on Head of Department
b. Shifts to subordinate officers
c. Is waived
d. Imposed on environmental lab
176. Section 15B(2) applies to:
a. Directors of companies
b. Officers other than Head of Department
c. Environmental analysts
d. National Green Tribunal
177. Liability under Section 15B is aimed to:
a. Ensure compliance by Government Departments
b. Punish private individuals
c. Reward companies following rules
d. Monitor laboratories only
178. Section 15B is applicable even if:
a. No environmental damage occurs
b. Damage is minimal
c. Officer acted negligently
d. Contravention is deliberate or accidental
179. The maximum penalty under Section 15B is:
a. One month of basic salary for Head or officer
b. One lakh rupees
c. Fifteen lakh rupees
d. No maximum defined
180. The proviso in Section 15B provides protection to officers who:
a. Act with due diligence
b. Perform duties in good faith
c. Both a and b
d. None of the above
181. Section 15B ensures that accountability flows from:
a. Company owners
b. Environmental labs
c. Heads of Departments to subordinate officers
d. Courts only
182. Penalty under Section 15B is:
a. Imposed by adjudicating officer under Section 15C
b. Directly by Central Government
c. By National Green Tribunal
d. By Environmental Analyst
183. If contravention occurs unknowingly, liability for Head of Department:
a. Imposed automatically
b. Waived if due diligence is proved
c. Doubled
d. Shifted to subordinate
184. Section 15B complements which principle of environmental governance?
a. Polluter Pays Principle
b. Precautionary Principle
c. Accountability of Government Officials
d. Sustainable Development Principle
185. An officer can avoid penalty under Section 15B(2) by:
a. Providing misleading data
b. Proving exercise of all due diligence
c. Shifting blame to another department
d. Filing appeal under Section
186. Section 15B ensures:
a. Private companies pay penalties
b. Government officers and departments are accountable for contraventions
c. Only courts monitor compliance
d. Environmental labs are penalized
187. Section 15C of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 deals with:
a. Appointment of environmental analysts
b. Appointment and powers of adjudicating officer
c. Penalty for Government Departments
d. Establishment of Environmental Protection Fund
188. The minimum rank for an adjudicating officer under Section 15C(1) is:
a. Deputy Secretary to the Government of India
b. Joint Secretary to the Government of India or Secretary to the State Government
c. Assistant Secretary to the Government of India
d. Director of Environmental Laboratory
189. The Central Government may appoint:
a. Only one adjudicating officer
b. Any number of adjudicating officers as required
c. Only officers from State Government
d. Only officers from private sector
190. The adjudicating officer has the power to:
a. Call upon any person alleged to have contravened the Act
b. Require production of documents or records relevant to the case
c. Impose penalty after giving opportunity of being heard
d. All of the above
191. While imposing penalty, the adjudicating officer must consider:
a. Population and area impacted
b. Frequency and duration of contravention
c. Vulnerability of persons affected and damage caused
d. All of the above, including undue gain derived and other prescribed factors
192. The penalty imposed under Section 15C can be in accordance with:
a. Sections 14A, 14B, 15, 15A or 15B
b. Section 1 only
c. Section 6 only
d. Environmental laboratory report
193. The adjudicating officer is required to:
a. Impose penalty without hearing the concerned person
b. Give a reasonable opportunity of being heard before imposing penalty
c. Consult the court before imposing penalty
d. Only recommend penalty to the Central Government
194. In addition to penalty, the amount imposed under Section 15C is:
a. Exclusive of any compensation
b. Inclusive of environmental laboratory charges
c. In addition to liability to pay relief or compensation under NGT Act, 2010
d. Only a fine for the officer
195. Section 15C(4)(e) requires consideration of:
a. Type of industry
b. Undue gain derived from contravention
c. Government policies
d. Laboratory accreditation
196. Adjudicating officer can require:
a. Only the Head of Department to produce documents
b. Any person having knowledge of facts or relevant documents
c. Environmental Analysts only
d. State Government only
197. Section 15C allows the adjudicating officer to act:
a. Independently under Central Government supervision
b. Only under orders of NGT
c. Only after environmental lab approval
d. Only after a court case
198. While adjudicating penalty, which of the following factors is NOT considered?
a. Frequency and duration of contravention
b. Environmental laboratory location
c. Population impacted
d. Undue gain derived
199. The authority of adjudicating officer under Section 15C(3) is:
a. Advisory only
b. Binding after inquiry and hearing
c. Limited to issuing warnings
d. Applicable only to private companies
200. Relief or compensation under NGT Act is:
a. Separate from penalty imposed under Section 15C
b. Included in the penalty
c. Waived for private individuals
d. Applicable only to companies
201. Which of the following is within the power of an adjudicating officer?
a. Call and examine records relevant to alleged contravention
b. Refer case to Environmental Laboratory for opinion
c. File criminal case in court
d. Establish new environmental standards
202. The Central Government appoints adjudicating officers to:
a. Ensure penalties are imposed fairly and systematically
b. Conduct environmental research
c. Manage Environmental Protection Fund
d. Monitor air and water quality
203. The adjudicating officer considers the vulnerability of persons affected under which sub-section?
a. 15C(1)
b. 15C(2)
c. 15C(4)(c)
d. 15C(5)
204. The adjudicating officer’s penalty can include:
a. Daily fines for ongoing contraventions
b. Salary deductions of Government employees
c. Compensation under NGT Act
d. Both a and c
205. Section 15C ensures that penalties are imposed:
a. Without any procedural safeguards
b. After due inquiry, hearing, and considering all relevant factors
c. Only for private companies
d. Only for environmental laboratories
206. Which of the following is a guiding factor in deciding the quantum of penalty under Section 15C?
a. Market price of the company
b. Population and area affected, damage caused, frequency, duration, undue gain
c. Number of environmental laboratories in the area
d. None of the above
207. Section 15D of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 deals with:
a. Penalty for companies
b. Appeal against orders of adjudicating officer
c. Appointment of Government Analysts
d. Powers of entry and inspection
208. Who can file an appeal under Section 15D?
a. Only the Central Government
b. Only the Environmental Laboratory
c. Any person aggrieved by the order of the adjudicating officer
d. Any officer of the State Government
209. Appeals under Section 15D are filed before:
a. Supreme Court of India
b. High Court
c. National Green Tribunal
d. Central Government
210. Which Act provides the establishment of the Tribunal to hear appeals under Section 15D?
a. Environment (Protection) Act, 1986
b. National Green Tribunal Act, 2010
c. Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981
d. Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974
211. What is the time limit to file an appeal under Section 15D(2)?
a. 30 days from the date of order
b. 45 days from the date of order
c. 60 days from the date on which the copy of the order is received
d. 90 days from the date of order
212. Before passing any order on appeal, the Tribunal must:
a. Consult the adjudicating officer only
b. Give the parties to the appeal an opportunity of being heard
c. Obtain prior approval of the Central Government
d. Seek advice from Environmental Laboratory
213. The Tribunal may, after hearing, pass an order:
a. Only confirming the order
b. Only setting aside the order
c. Confirming, modifying, or setting aside the order
d. Only reducing the penalty
214. Section 15D(4) provides that an appeal will not be entertained unless:
a. The appellant submits a written apology
b. Ten per cent of the penalty imposed is deposited with the Tribunal
c. The Central Government approves the appeal
d. The Environmental Laboratory submits a report
215. The deposit required under Section 15D(4) is:
a. 5% of the penalty
b. 10% of the penalty
c. 25% of the penalty
d. Full amount of the penalty
216. Section 15D applies to appeals against orders of:
a. Environmental Analysts
b. Adjudicating officer under Section 15C
c. Head of Government Department
d. State Pollution Control Board
217. If the appeal is filed late beyond 60 days, the Tribunal:
a. Can entertain it only with permission of Central Government
b. Cannot entertain it unless sufficient cause is shown
c. Must entertain it in all cases
d. Returns it without considering
218. The National Green Tribunal can modify the order appealed against by:
a. Increasing the penalty
b. Reducing the penalty
c. Setting aside the order
d. All of the above
219. The deposit under Section 15D(4) serves as:
a. Full payment of penalty
b. Security to prevent frivolous appeals
c. Compensation to victims
d. Administrative fee of Tribunal
220. Filing an appeal under Section 15D does not:
a. Stop the original order from taking effect unless ordered by Tribunal
b. Allow Tribunal to hear the appeal
c. Require deposit of 10% of penalty
d. Involve a hearing
221. The appeal under Section 15D can be filed by:
a. Only companies
b. Any person aggrieved, including individuals and companies
c. Only Central Government Departments
d. Only the adjudicating officer
222. The National Green Tribunal Act, 2010 is applicable to Section 15D from:
a. 1986 onwards
b. After the commencement of NGT Act, 2010
c. After filing of appeal in court
d. Only for State Government Departments
223. The main objective of Section 15D is to:
a. Provide a mechanism for environmental research
b. Ensure fair hearing and appeal against adjudicating officer’s orders
c. Collect environmental data
d. Manage Environmental Protection Fund
224. Section 15D ensures that the Tribunal has powers to:
a. Hear appeals without hearing the parties
b. Only reduce penalties
c. Confirm, modify, or set aside orders after hearing
d. Appoint new adjudicating officers
225. Section 15D(2) mentions the time limit for filing appeal as:
a. From the date of passing order
b. From the date of receiving the copy of the order
c. From the date of deposit of penalty
d. From the date of appointment of adjudicating officer
226. The Section 15D ensures that:
a. Appeals can be filed only against Government Departments
b. The aggrieved person has access to a legal forum to challenge adjudicating officer’s orders
c. The penalty is waived automatically upon appeal
d. Environmental Laboratories are immune from appeal
227. Section 15E deals with:
a. Appointment of Government Analysts
b. Credit of penalty amount to Environmental Protection Fund
c. Appeal against orders of adjudicating officer
d. Powers of entry and inspection
228. Penalties under which sections are to be credited to the Environmental Protection Fund under Section 15E?
a. Sections 5, 6, 7
b. Sections 14A, 14B, 15, 15A, 15B
c. Sections 12, 13, 14
d. Sections 10, 11, 12
229. The Environmental Protection Fund is established under which section?
a. Section 14
b. Section 16
c. Section 15D
d. Section 17
230. The main purpose of Section 15E is to:
a. Provide relief to violators
b. Ensure penalties are credited to the Environmental Protection Fund
c. Appoint adjudicating officers
d. Regulate industrial processes
231. Section 15E applies to:
a. Only companies
b. Only Government Departments
c. Any person or entity liable to pay penalty under Sections 14A, 14B, 15, 15A, or 15B
d. Only individuals
232. Where is the penalty amount credited as per Section 15E?
a. Consolidated Fund of India
b. State Government Fund
c. Environmental Protection Fund
d. Public Works Fund
233. Section 15E ensures that the penalty serves the purpose of:
a. Financing Government salaries
b. Supporting environmental protection initiatives
c. Paying legal fees
d. Compensating companies for losses
234. Which of the following is correct regarding Section 15E?
a. Only the principal penalty is credited
b. Only additional penalty is credited
c. Both penalty and additional penalty are credited
d. Penalty is retained by the Central Government
235. The Environmental Protection Fund under Section 15E is used for:
a. Arbitrary Government expenditure
b. Environmental protection and related activities (as per Section 16)
c. Payment to offenders
d. Industrial development
236. Section 15E applies automatically once:
a. The offender deposits 10% of penalty
b. Penalty is imposed under the specified sections
c. Environmental Laboratory issues a report
d. Central Government issues directions
237. Which section governs the establishment of the fund that receives the penalty?
a. Section 14A
b. Section 16
c. Section 15B
d. Section 12
238. Section 15E ensures financial accountability by:
a. Directing that penalties fund environmental protection
b. Allowing penalties to be used for administrative costs only
c. Depositing penalties in the Central Government’s account
d. Reimbursing polluting companies
239. The penalty credited to the Environmental Protection Fund can be used for:
a. Funding research, awareness, and remedial measures
b. Salaries of private companies
c. Construction of factories
d. Payment of legal fees for offenders
240. The Section 15E comes into effect when:
a. Any offense under Sections 14A, 14B, 15, 15A, or 15B is detected
b. The Environmental Protection Fund is audited
c. The offender appeals to the NGT
d. Any Government Analyst reports a violation
241. Which of the following is TRUE under Section 15E?
a. Penalties are optional contributions to the Fund
b. Penalties and additional penalties must be credited to the Fund
c. Only penalties exceeding ₹5 lakh are credited
d. Fund receives donations only from voluntary contributors
242. Section 15E establishes a link between:
a. Industrial development and pollution control
b. Penalties imposed and environmental protection funding
c. Courts and Central Government
d. State Governments and National Green Tribunal
243. The Environmental Protection Fund is a result of:
a. Government grants only
b. Donations from companies
c. Penalties and additional penalties under specific sections
d. Voluntary contributions from citizens
244. Section 15E ensures that penalties are not:
a. Retained by the violator
b. Used for environmental purposes
c. Credited to the Environmental Protection Fund
d. Allocated to Central Government administration
245. Section 15E is linked with which other section for the purpose of fund usage?
a. Section 12
b. Section 16
c. Section 14
d. Section 10
246. The key objective of Section 15E is to:
a. Penalize offenders without using the funds for environmental benefit
b. Ensure that financial resources from penalties are utilized for environmental protection
c. Allocate penalties to the Central Government for administrative purposes
d. Reduce penalties imposed on companies
247. Section 15F deals with:
a. Appointment of Government Analysts
b. Offence for failure to pay penalty or additional penalty
c. Appeal to National Green Tribunal
d. Environmental laboratory functions
248. If a person fails to pay the penalty under sections 14A, 14B, 15, 15A, or 15B within 90 days, he may be punished with:
a. Imprisonment up to one year
b. Imprisonment up to three years or fine up to twice the penalty, or both
c. Only fine up to the amount of penalty
d. Warning letter from Central Government
249. The “company” in Section 15F includes:
a. Only private limited companies
b. Body corporate, firm, trust, society, or any association of individuals
c. Only public limited companies
d. Only Government companies
250. Who is liable if the offence is committed by a company?
a. Only the company
b. Every person directly in charge and responsible for conduct of the company
c. Only the Board of Directors
d. Only the CEO
251. A director or manager is not liable under Section 15F if:
a. He was absent during the offence
b. He proves the offence was committed without his knowledge or he exercised all due diligence to prevent it
c. He is a minor
d. He was on leave at the time of offence
252. Section 15F applies to penalties under:
a. Sections 14A, 14B, 15, 15A, 15B
b. Sections 12, 13, 14
c. Sections 5, 6, 7, 8
d. Sections 16, 16A, 16B
253. Maximum imprisonment under Section 15F is:
a. One year
b. Two years
c. Three years
d. Five years
254. Maximum fine under Section 15F can be:
a. Equal to the penalty
b. Twice the amount of the penalty
c. Ten times the penalty
d. Fixed ₹1 lakh only
255. Section 15F applies to a company even if:
a. The offence was committed by an employee without the consent of directors
b. The offence was voluntary
c. The offence was in another State
d. The company has closed down
256. Directors or officers of a company may be held liable if the offence is committed:
a. Without their knowledge
b. With their consent or connivance, or due to their neglect
c. By accident
d. By a third party
257. Section 15F explains “director” to include:
a. Only directors of public companies
b. Partner of a firm, members of society or trust, or members of any association of individuals
c. Only shareholders
d. Only managing director
258. The term “company” under Section 15F includes:
a. Only private limited companies
b. All forms of associations of persons or corporate entities
c. Only companies listed on the stock exchange
d. Only Government departments