Angry with the Punjab government for not compensating them adequately, the farmers said they were being put under huge financial burden by the authorities for implementing the NGT's 2015 direction banning stubble burning.
The farmers from various districts including Bathinda, Patiala, Ferozepur and Sangrur, started assembling outside the NGT premise from around 9 am.
Bharatiya Kisan Union-Rajewal president Balbir Singh Rajewal, representing the farmers, said the NGT was unaware of the ground situation and it was proceeding on the basis of the information provided by the Punjab government in the case.
He said farmers are not able to earn back even their initial investments in the agriculture and are running into losses. Bearing the cost of machines to take care of crop residue without burning them is not easy in such a scenario, he said.
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There has to be some financial help from the government but when "the state government is not able to pay salary to its employees, how will they give money to farmers", he asked.
"The power generation units and bio-mass plants have also refused to give any money for depositing agricultural residue. The government has told the NGT they have a village in Patiala. But what about other areas. There has to be some mechanism," he said.
A troop of Central Reserve Police Force and Delhi police was deployed outside the tribunal to tackle the situation.
All farmers left after their leader briefed them about the proceedings in the case and told them that they have been impleaded as parties in the case.
The green panel had said that the five north Indian states Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana and Delhi
which have issued notification prohibiting agriculture crop residue burning should ensure that these notifications are enforced rigorously and proper action is taken against the defaulters.
The tribunal had said small land owners having less than two acres of land will have to pay Rs 2,500; medium land owners holding (over 2 acres and less than five acres) will have to pay Rs. 5,000; and those owning over five acres will have to pay Rs 15,000 per incident of crop burning towards environment compensation.