Rajiv had already invested nearly Rs. 4.8 crore in setting up an auto-component manufacturing unit in Manesar. The machinery was installed, 32 workers had joined, and the company had accepted its first commercial order.
The plant was expected to begin production within 15 days.
However, during the final compliance review, the team discovered that the production capacity entered in the Consent to Operate application was 1,800 tonnes per year, while the Consent to Establish allowed only 1,200 tonnes per year.
The latest wastewater analysis report was more than 3 months old. A newly installed shot-blasting machine was missing from the approved plant layout, and the pollution-control arrangement was still based on the earlier machinery configuration.

The CTO application could not be filed in that condition.
The company had to delay production, update its environmental documentation, revise its technical layout and obtain fresh laboratory reports. What appeared to be a small documentation mismatch turned into a serious operational delay.
This is why obtaining a CTO Certificate in Haryana should not be treated as a routine online formality. The Haryana State Pollution Control Board evaluates whether the plant installed at the site matches the approvals, production capacity, pollution-control systems and technical information submitted by the applicant.
A CTO Certificate in Haryana is formally known as a Consent to Operate. It is issued by the Haryana State Pollution Control Board before an industrial or commercial facility begins operations.
The consent is generally required under Sections 25 and 26 of the Water Prevention and Control of Pollution Act, 1974 and Section 21 of the Air Prevention and Control of Pollution Act, 1981.
A Consent to Operate confirms that the unit has installed the required pollution-control systems and is ready to operate within the approved production capacity and environmental conditions.
The CTO may specify:
A CTO is not a one-time registration that allows unrestricted operation. It is a conditional environmental approval. The business must continue to meet all consent conditions after the approval is issued.
Environmental compliance becomes easier when the business understands the measurable requirements attached to the application.
Under the published HSPCB procedure, a complete consent application is generally targeted for processing within 21 working days. However, this timeline may increase where the application is incomplete, the Board raises a query, or the plant is not ready for inspection.
For renewal applications, businesses should traditionally begin the process at least 90 days before the expiry date mentioned in the consent order.
Delayed filing may attract additional consent fees of:
The amount depends on how close the application is filed to the expiry date.
For renewal, the business may also need to maintain at least 3 months of operational records for the ETP, STP, air-pollution-control systems, flow meters, energy consumption and chemical use.
The main numbers to remember are:
The CTO requirement is not limited to large factories.
Any unit that generates trade effluent, sewage, air emissions, hazardous waste, process waste, dust, fumes, noise or other regulated pollution may need consent from HSPCB.
The requirement commonly applies to:
HSPCB categorises industrial activities according to pollution potential. The current framework includes Red, Orange, Green, White and Blue categories.
The applicable category depends on the actual process carried out at the facility.
For example, a basic assembly unit may have a lower pollution profile than a unit that also carries out painting, electroplating, pickling, phosphating, heat treatment or chemical cleaning.
Businesses should therefore classify the complete manufacturing process rather than relying only on the name of the industry.
Consent to Establish and Consent to Operate are separate environmental approvals.
Consent to Establish is required before the business begins construction, installation or establishment of the unit. It approves the proposed site, manufacturing process, production capacity, water requirement, fuel, pollution-control systems and plant layout.
Consent to Operate is required after the approved machinery and pollution-control systems have been installed. It permits the unit to start commercial operations.
In simple terms:
A company should not use the CTO application to regularise an unapproved expansion.
If the production capacity has increased from 10 tonnes per day to 15 tonnes per day, or if the company has added a new product, fuel, furnace or manufacturing process, the CTE may need to be amended before the CTO application is filed.
| Regulation or Framework | Main Requirement | Timeline or Number | Main Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Water Act, 1974 | Consent for wastewater and trade effluent | Sections 25 and 26 | Refusal, closure or legal action |
| Air Act, 1981 | Consent for industrial emissions | Section 21 | Closure or utility restriction |
| HSPCB Consent Procedure | Online application and technical scrutiny | 21 working-day target | Processing delay |
| HSPCB Renewal Procedure | Advance renewal filing | 90 days | Additional consent fee |
| Renewal Compliance Records | Operational logbooks and monitoring | Previous 3 months | Query or refusal |
| Updated National Consent Framework | Continuing CTO validity subject to cancellation | Fee period of 5 to 25 years | Wrong validity assumption |
The first step is to determine the correct category of the unit.
This should be based on the actual manufacturing process, water use, fuel, chemicals, emissions, waste generation and pollution-control requirements.
A unit carrying out only cutting and assembly may fall into a different category from a unit that also includes painting, surface treatment or chemical processing.
Wrong categorisation can result in an incorrect fee, wrong application route or technical objection during scrutiny.
Before filing, confirm:
The CTE is the starting point for the first CTO application.
The business should compare the completed facility with every important condition mentioned in the CTE.
Product names, production capacity, plant layout, fuel, water requirement, ETP capacity, air-pollution-control system and waste-disposal method should match the approved project.
If the CTE permits 1,200 tonnes per year, the CTO application should not show 1,800 tonnes per year unless the expansion has already been approved.
The review should confirm:
The facility should be technically ready before the application is submitted.
The Board may verify whether the pollution-control equipment has been installed and whether it is capable of handling the actual pollution load.
An ETP designed for 20 KLD may not be sufficient if the plant generates 28 KLD of wastewater at full production.
Similarly, a dust collector connected to only 3 out of 5 emission points may be considered incomplete.
The business should conduct internal trial runs and begin maintaining records before filing.
Operational readiness should include:
The water balance is one of the most important documents in a CTO application.
It should explain how the total water entering the plant is used, treated, recycled, evaporated or discharged.
For example, if the unit uses 50 KLD of fresh water, the complete 50 KLD should be accounted for.
The water balance may show:
The numbers entered in the water balance should match the CTO application, ETP design, flow diagram and disposal arrangement.
An unexplained difference of even 5 KLD or 10 KLD can result in a technical query.
The HSPCB CTO application is filed through the online consent-management system.
The applicant should use the correct company name, legal entity, plant address and authorised-person details.
The portal information should match the GST certificate, PAN, CTE, land documents, financial certificate and technical drawings.
Common portal mistakes include:
The application should be reviewed before final submission because one incorrect figure may affect multiple sections.
The documents should be complete, readable and properly arranged.
The business should avoid uploading unclear scans or combining unrelated documents into one large file without labels.
The first CTO application generally requires:
The same unit of measurement should be used across the documents.
If the portal shows production in tonnes per year, the machinery-capacity calculation should also be converted into tonnes per year.
The consent fee is linked to the applicable HSPCB fee structure and the capital investment of the project.
Capital investment may include:
The investment figure entered in the application should match the CA certificate and financial records.
A difference of Rs. 25 lakh or Rs. 50 lakh may affect the applicable fee category and the reviewing authority.
The business should verify:
After submission, HSPCB may conduct document scrutiny, raise a query or inspect the facility.
During inspection, the officer may compare the physical plant with the application and the CTE.
The inspection may cover:
The plant should be ready to demonstrate actual operation of the pollution-control systems.
Simply installing an ETP is not enough. The business should be able to show that the ETP is being operated, monitored and maintained.
If HSPCB raises a query, the response should be submitted point by point.
A general reply stating that the unit is compliant may not be sufficient.
If the Board raises 6 observations, the applicant should provide 6 numbered responses with supporting documents.
A proper query response should include:
Where one figure changes, all connected documents should also be updated.
For example, if wastewater generation is revised from 20 KLD to 28 KLD, the ETP capacity, water balance, flow chart and application should all be reviewed.
After the CTO is issued, the business should review every condition in the consent order.
The approval may include conditions relating to production, water, fuel, discharge, waste disposal, sampling, environmental reporting and monitoring.
These conditions should be converted into a compliance calendar.
The unit should maintain:
A long-validity consent does not remove the need for continuous compliance.
| Document | Important Information | Common Risk |
|---|---|---|
| CTE order | Approved capacity and process | CTO exceeds approved scope |
| CA investment certificate | Project investment in rupees | Mismatch with accounts |
| Plant layout | Machinery and pollution-control equipment | Installed equipment missing |
| Process flow chart | Complete manufacturing stages | Pollution source omitted |
| Water balance | Water use and wastewater in KLD | Numbers do not reconcile |
| ETP and STP design | Treatment capacity in KLD | Capacity below actual generation |
| Stack details | Stack height and connected source | Incomplete emission arrangement |
| Laboratory report | Applicable pollution parameters | Old or incomplete report |
| Land document | Plot and site details | Address mismatch |
| Waste authorization | Waste type and quantity | Different quantity in CTO |
| Fee receipt | Correct consent fee | Wrong investment category |
| Authority letter | Company-authorised signatory | Consultant shown as applicant |
A renewal application focuses on actual operational performance.
The Board may review whether the unit complied with the existing consent conditions and whether pollution-control systems were operated regularly.
The renewal file may require:
The analysis reports should reflect the current machinery, process and production conditions.
| Stage | Practical Timeline | Main Risk |
|---|---|---|
| CTE review | 2 to 3 working days | Capacity mismatch |
| Document collection | 5 to 10 working days | Missing records |
| Laboratory testing | 5 to 15 working days | Delay in reports |
| Internal audit | 2 to 5 working days | Plant not ready |
| Online filing | 1 to 2 working days | Data errors |
| HSPCB processing | 21 working-day target | Query or inspection delay |
| Query response | Within portal deadline | Application rejection |
| Renewal preparation | At least 90 days before expiry | Additional fee |
The 21-working-day target applies to a complete application.
Businesses should generally begin preparation 30 to 45 days before the planned filing date. This provides time for testing, correction of technical documents and internal review.
Late renewal can significantly increase the cost of compliance.
For example, if the normal consent fee is Rs. 1,00,000:
Under the published Haryana procedure:
This is why renewal should be treated as a planned compliance activity rather than an emergency filing.
The national consent framework was amended in January 2026.
Under the amended framework, a CTO may continue to remain valid until it is cancelled through the prescribed procedure.
The State Government or Pollution Control Board may also determine a one-time consent fee for a period ranging from 5 to 25 years.
This means the validity of the consent order and the period for which the fee is paid may be treated separately.
The 2026 framework also introduces:
Businesses in Haryana should continue to follow the validity date and conditions written in their existing CTO until the state-level implementation is clearly reflected in the HSPCB portal and orders.
Rajiv had spent 14 months setting up an auto-component unit in Manesar.
The company had invested around Rs. 4.8 crore in land development, building, machinery and pollution-control equipment. The CTE allowed production of 1,200 tonnes per year.
During installation, the machinery supplier offered a higher-capacity shot-blasting and machining system at a discounted price. The management accepted the offer because it would allow the plant to meet future demand.
The new line increased the possible production capacity to around 1,800 tonnes per year.
The production team entered 1,800 tonnes in the CTO application. They assumed the higher capacity would be approved automatically because the machinery had already been installed.
During the final compliance review, 5 major problems were discovered.
The CTO capacity was 600 tonnes higher than the CTE capacity. This represented a 50 percent increase. The new machine was not shown in the approved layout. The dust-collection calculation was based on the earlier equipment. The wastewater report was 4 months old. The GST certificate and CTE also showed the plot number in slightly different formats.
Rajiv was under pressure because the company had received a customer order worth Rs. 36 lakh.
He initially wanted to submit the application and correct the documents later. However, the compliance team explained that an inconsistent application could lead to a query, inspection objection or rejection.
The company stopped the filing.
The team revised the plant layout, regularised the increased capacity, updated the pollution-control calculation, obtained fresh laboratory reports and aligned the plant address across all documents.
The correction process took 26 days.
Although production started later than planned, the final application accurately represented the plant. During inspection, the officer could match the machinery, capacity, pollution-control systems and application data.
After the experience, Rajiv introduced a simple internal rule.
No environmental application could be filed until the production, engineering, finance and compliance departments signed the same one-page technical data sheet.
The case shows that many CTO delays are caused by internal inconsistency rather than the online portal.
The installed and applied production capacity should match the CTE.
A unit approved for 10 tonnes per day should not apply for 15 tonnes per day without first regularising the additional 5 tonnes.
The total water intake should match the process use, domestic use, evaporation, wastewater, recycling and final disposal.
If the unit receives 60 KLD but accounts for only 45 KLD, the missing 15 KLD will require explanation.
The ETP, STP, scrubber or dust collector should be designed for the maximum pollution load.
A 20 KLD ETP may not be sufficient where actual wastewater reaches 25 KLD during full production.
Laboratory reports should represent the current machinery and production process.
Reports collected before an expansion or equipment change may not demonstrate present compliance.
The capital investment entered on the portal should match the CA certificate and accounts.
A major difference may affect the fee and application scrutiny.
The Board may ask for electricity consumption, chemical use, flow-meter readings and sludge records.
A unit claiming continuous ETP operation without supporting records may face additional questions.
Operating without a valid CTO can expose the unit to serious consequences.
Depending on the nature of the violation, action may include:
For recyclers and waste-processing units, a valid CTO is often required as a supporting document for other environmental registrations.
A missing or expired CTO may therefore affect multiple approvals, not only the HSPCB consent.
Before submitting the application, the business should conduct a joint review involving the production, engineering, finance and compliance teams.
The final figures should be frozen in one verified master sheet.
The review should confirm:
Every number entered on the portal should be supported by a drawing, meter, calculation, invoice, certificate or operational record.
A CTO Certificate in Haryana is one of the most important operating approvals for industries regulated by HSPCB.
A complete application may be processed within the published target of 21 working days, but the actual timeline depends on document quality, technical accuracy and site readiness.
Even a small mismatch in production capacity, water balance, capital investment, machinery or plant address can delay the entire project.
Renewal should be planned at least 90 days in advance under the published Haryana procedure. Delayed filing may increase the consent fee by up to 200 percent.
The updated 2026 consent framework is also changing the system through continuing CTO validity, 5 to 25-year fee periods, Registered Environment Auditors and consolidated approvals.
Businesses should monitor HSPCB implementation while continuing to follow the conditions and dates mentioned in their existing consent order.
The cost of careful preparation is normally much lower than the cost of idle machinery, unused manpower, delayed orders, customer penalties and regulatory closure.
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A complete application is generally targeted for processing within 21 working days. Queries, inspections and missing documents can increase the timeline.
Businesses should traditionally start the renewal process at least 90 days before the expiry date mentioned in the consent order.
Delayed renewal may attract additional consent fees of 50 percent, 100 percent or 200 percent, depending on the timing of the filing.
The business may need to provide the previous 3 months of ETP, STP, flow-meter, electricity, chemical-consumption and pollution-control operation records.