SC upholds HC order vacating ban on import of natural rubber
By Nisha Das | 05 Jun 2003
Mumbai: The Supreme Court has upheld the Bombay high court order vacating the ban on the import of natural rubber under the advance licence scheme (ALS).
Dismissing a special leave petition filed by the centre challenging the Bombay HC order, a two-member bench comprising Justice Santosh Hegde and Justice B P Singh said the government cannot approach the court to change its own policies. When additional solicitor general Harish Salve pleaded that the issue involved over 10 lakh small growers, the judges said that do not expect the court to come to the government's rescue.
The Bombay HC, on a petition filed by Naresh Udeshi, an exporter of rubber products, ruled that the ban imposed by the directorate-general of foreign trade (DGFT) on duty-free import of natural rubber through ALS was null and void.
Anil Sampat, president, All India Rubber Industries Association, says the high court had said that the DGFT has no powers to ban imports either through notifications or circulars. The court in its ruling in last September had questioned the DGFT's decision particularly when the government had allowed duty-free import under ALS on 2 April 2002 in the Exim Policy.
"The court, in particular, said the DGFT has no power to impose such a ban under the Foreign Control Trade Act. When the hearing came up in the Supreme Court recently, the bench said the government could amend its policy to give effect to the ban under ALS. The judges also asked the government why it should approach the court to change a policy," says Sampat.
The government had banned imports under ALS in February 1999 through a circular because of the steep fall in the price of rubber during 1998-99. Imports under ALS are free since these are made against exports of value-added products. The government then took other measures such as fixing a minimum statutory price for rubber to help stabilise the prices.
Though
the ban was relaxed in 2001, it was again tightened last
year as over 40,000 tonnes of rubber were imported. The
government
also came up a few measures such as allowing imports only
through Visakhapatnam and Kolkata ports and asking importers
to conform shipments to Bureau of Indian Standard norms.
Latest articles
Featured articles
Shifting terminals: Why global travelers are rethinking trips to the United States
By Cygnus | 09 Mar 2026
Global travel patterns are shifting as costs rise, visa delays persist and competition grows. Here’s why many travelers are rethinking trips to the United States in 2026.
Safety over scale: The Middle East conflict forces a pause in Indian tech expansion
By Axel Miller | 05 Mar 2026
Autonomous vehicle firms pause Abu Dhabi and Dubai operations amid Middle East conflict. Will Indian tech projects pivot to GIFT City and Bangalore?
The energy island: Why Big Tech is building its own power systems for the AI era
By Cygnus | 04 Mar 2026
AI data centers are reshaping the energy market as companies like Amazon, Microsoft and Google invest in dedicated power generation to support massive computing deman
The great memory squeeze: Why your next RAM upgrade could cost more
By Axel Miller | 02 Mar 2026
Rising AI infrastructure demand is tightening global memory supply, driving higher RAM prices for PCs and smartphones and reshaping the semiconductor cycle.
The agentic shift: re-architecting business for the 2026 autonomy cycle
By Cygnus | 26 Feb 2026
From chip competition to IT pricing models, the rise of agentic AI is transforming how companies build, deploy, and monetize technology.
The mainframe moment: how AI-driven modernization is reshaping the COBOL economy
By Axel Miller | 24 Feb 2026
New AI coding tools are accelerating legacy system modernization, raising opportunities and risks for banks, enterprises, and the IT services industry.
The concrete cloud: India’s $250 billion bet on the physical foundations of AI
By Cygnus | 23 Feb 2026
India pivots to AI's physical layer with $250B in pledges for chips and data centers to lead the new era of 'Agentic Commerce.' Read the full report.
The $250 billion pivot: how 2026 became the year AI paid the rent
By Cygnus | 18 Feb 2026
2026 marks the shift from AI “promise” to “profitability.” Explore how India’s sovereign compute and Infosys’s revenue metrics are defining a $250B market pivot.
The analog antidote: perception, reality, and the "Windows crisis" narrative
By Cygnus | 17 Feb 2026
Viral claims of a Windows collapse contrast with market data showing a slower shift as enterprises weigh AI, hardware costs, and legacy systems.


