An environmental consultant provides expert advice on environmental compliance, impact
assessments, pollution control, and sustainability practices to industries and governments.
Yes, we work with clients nationwide, including site visits and documentation support.
Consultants help phased industries comply with environmental laws, obtain permits,
manage pollution, and implement mitigation strategies.
To gradually eliminate harmful or non-compliant processes, reduce pollution, and promote
sustainability.
Environment Protection Act, Water Act, Air Act, Hazardous Waste Rules, E-Waste Rules,
and Plastic Waste Rules.
It is a statutory approval required before starting any project that may impact the
environment, especially in industries.
A permit issued by the State Pollution Control Board (SPCB) allowing an industry to
construct and set up facilities.
A permit that allows an industry to begin operations after meeting environmental
requirements.
It evaluates the potential environmental risks of a proposed project and suggests
mitigation measures.
A facility used to treat industrial wastewater before it’s discharged into the
environment
Equipment like bag filters, scrubbers, or ESPs that remove pollutants from industrial
emissions.
Wastes that are toxic, reactive, corrosive, or flammable, posing significant risks to
health and the environment.
A treatment process ensuring no wastewater is discharged into the environment.
To ensure pollutants remain within permissible limits and avoid environmental harm or
penalties.
Due to their non-biodegradable nature and severe environmental impact.
Paper-based, biodegradable, or reusable packaging materials.
Use of cleaner fuels, retrofit of pollution control tech, and adoption of renewable
energy.
Through stricter regulations, incentives for cleaner tech, and scheduled timelines.
A policy where producers are responsible for the post-use management of their products,
especially plastics and electronics.
A systematic evaluation of how well an organization complies with environmental laws and
practices.
The process of identifying and evaluating risks to health and environment from
industrial operations.
By adopting renewable energy, improving energy efficiency, and sustainable sourcing.
EIA, EC applications, pollution control planning, audits, monitoring, training, and
reporting.
For expert guidance on regulatory compliance, risk reduction, and sustainable practices.
A strategy designed to reduce adverse environmental impacts of industrial activities.
By establishing and improving Environmental Management Systems (EMS) in compliance with
ISO standards.
Rapid growth due to increasing environmental awareness, stricter laws, ESG expectations,
and climate commitments.
CEMS is a system installed in industries to continuously track and report air emissions
in real time to pollution control authorities.
CEQMS tracks the quality of treated wastewater before discharge, ensuring compliance
with discharge norms.
An online portal used by industries in India to apply for environmental consents and
upload compliance data.
A disclosure document where companies report their environmental, social, and
governance (ESG) performance and goals.
By using eco-friendly raw materials, energy-efficient machinery, waste minimization,
and clean technologies.
Achieving net-zero carbon emissions by reducing emissions and offsetting the remainder
through carbon credits or renewables.
Through public hearings, CSR initiatives, awareness drives, and grievance redressal
mechanisms.
PM2.5, PM10, SO₂, NO₂, CO, O₃, NH₃, Pb, and VOCs.
Monitoring of pollutants released from industrial chimneys or stacks, such as
particulate matter, gases, and temperature.
pH, BOD, COD, TSS, TDS, oil and grease, heavy metals, and ammonia.
A single sample taken at a specific time and location, representing a snapshot of water
quality.
Combining multiple samples taken over time to give an average water quality result.
CPCB/SPCB norms define maximum allowable limits for pollutants in treated water before
discharge into surface bodies or land.
Measuring sound levels (in decibels) around industrial units to ensure they are within
permissible limits for day and night.
75 dB (day), 70 dB (night).
High Volume Samplers (HVS), Respirable Dust Samplers (RDS), real-time analyzers, and
weather stations.
As per CPCB norms, at least twice a week, 24-hourly samples, depending on project
category and environmental clearance (EC) conditions.
NAAQS are pollutant-specific thresholds set by CPCB to ensure public health and
environmental safety.
Source monitoring measures emissions directly at the pollution source (e.g., chimney),
while ambient monitoring assesses pollutant levels in surrounding air.
These are government-approved labs that provide unbiased, certified environmental
testing and reporting services for industries.
Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 and rules framed under it (e.g., Air Act, Water Act,
Hazardous Waste Rules).
It may face legal action, penalties, suspension of Consent to Operate, or closure
directions from pollution control boards.
A mandatory annual report under the Environment Protection Rules detailing environmental
performance, submitted to the SPCB.
They conduct testing of samples from air, water, soil, and biological sources and
generate valid data for regulatory purposes.
Yes, SPCBs can suspend or cancel consents if there is a violation of conditions,
non-compliance, or public complaints.