SC urged to use both sides of pages to save paper, trees

Plea seeks SC to use both sides of paper to go green
When the top court was doing so much for environmental protection and issuing directions to different agencies, why can't a beginning be made by itself to reduce consumption of paper, the petitioner asked.

New Delhi: A plea has been filed in the Supreme Court by a think tank to seek a direction to the apex court Registry to insist on using both sides of the pages while filing documents like petitions, pleadings, counters, rejoinders and annexures.

Seeking a re-visit to the Registry's past order that all filings in the top court would be on one side of the paper in double-spaced typing and wide margins, the Centre for Accountability and Systemic Change (CASC) said that doing away with this practice will help save a lot of paper and thus contribute to environmental protection.

CASC counsel Virag Gupta said that when the top court was doing so much for environmental protection and issuing directions to different agencies, why can't a beginning be made by it (top court) to reduce consumption of paper whose manufacture involves the use of a huge quantity of water and cutting of trees.

The petitioner sought directions that when petitions are filed, the Registry should seek just one copy to cure defects, and only then should more copies of the final petition be filed.

It requires 10 litres of water to make one A4-size paper and a tree on an average yields about 8,433 sheets, the petitioner claimed.

Pointing out that Indian courts are one of the biggest users of paper despite e-filing prevalent in some courts, the CASC said: "At the national level, 13,91,426 and 113,012 new cases were filed in subordinate courts and high courts in the last one month alone."

Considering all these cases used 50 pages each, using single-side prints, a total of 601,775,200 pages were used. Had both sides of the pages been used, it would have saved approximately 36,108 trees along with 3,00,88,76,000 litres of water, the CASC said.

Coming to the Supreme Court, the think tank said that 61,520 matters/cases were instituted between October 2016 and September 2017.

Considering each case has only two parties, at least eight sets of petitions would be required for filing in the Registry, including four for the court, one each for the counsel of both parties, one for each party. If on an average, a petition is of 100 pages only, a minimum of 4.92 crore papers would be required just for filing.

If both sides of the paper were used while filing fresh cases, CASC said, it would have saved about 2,953 trees in one year alone, apart from 24.6 crore litres of water.

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