04 Jun Centre’s Big Clean-Air Boost for Delhi-NCR
This article covers “Daily Current Affairs”
SYLLABUS MAPPING : GS Paper 3 : Environment
FOR PRELIMS : Emission Norms, BS-VI, CAQM, NCRPB, AQI, NOx, Vehicle Scrapping Policy, NCAP
FOR MAINS : India’s transition from BS-IV to BS-VI emission norms (leapfrogging BS-V) in 2020 and the Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) Act 2021 represent significant milestones in India’s environmental governance. Examine how the new Delhi-NCR vehicle replacement scheme builds upon these foundations, the role of incentive-based policy design versus command-and-control regulation in achieving environmental compliance, and the challenges of implementing such schemes given the socio-economic profile of India’s commercial transport sector.
5% interest subvention on vehicle loans for 5 years; monthly fuel vouchers up to ₹4,800; lump-sum EV purchase benefit; Certificate of Deposit (scrap token) trading value
Waiver of registration fees; up to 100% motor vehicle tax concession for new BS-VI/EV vehicles (10 yrs); 50% concession for used BS-VI vehicles; waiver of pending liabilities on scrapped vehicle
BS-III and older: mandatory scrapping at Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facilities (RVSFs). BS-IV: may be scrapped OR sold outside NCR in non-NCAP cities/towns
Stricter norms for Delhi: light goods vehicles must be electric; buses must be BS-VI CNG or electric only — no diesel buses eligible in Delhi city
Funded via NCRPB (MoHUA); implemented by MoRTH + MoPNG; states: Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, UP. Govt vehicles excluded from all benefits.
Significant reduction in PM2.5, NOx, and BC (Black Carbon) emissions from Delhi-NCR’s commercial fleet; contribute to improved AQI across the region
| Standard | Year | Euro Equivalent | Key Features | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BS-I / BS-II | 2000 / 2005 | Euro 1 / Euro 2 | Basic emission controls; limited NOx and PM standards; widespread use of carburetors | Banned nationally |
| BS-III | 2010 | Euro 3 | Catalytic converters mandatory; significant NOx and HC reduction vs BS-II. SC banned BS-III vehicle sales from April 2017 | Banned nationally; mandatory scrapping under new scheme |
| BS-IV | 2017 | Euro 4 | Electronic Fuel Injection; tighter PM and NOx limits; still 2.7× more polluting than BS-VI. Sold until March 2020 | Cannot be newly registered; BS-IV vehicles targeted for replacement/scrapping under NCR scheme |
| BS-VI | April 2020 | Euro 6 | India leapfrogged BS-V directly to BS-VI — a historic jump. Diesel Particulate Filter (DPF), Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR), NOx traps mandatory. PM emissions reduced by 82%, NOx by 68% vs BS-IV | Current standard for all new vehicles since April 1, 2020 |
| BS-VI Phase 2 (OBD-II) | April 2023 | Euro 6d | Real Driving Emissions (RDE) testing added; On-Board Diagnostics (OBD-II) mandatory — detects emission failures in real-time while vehicle is in operation | Mandatory for new vehicles since April 2023 |
- CAQM (Commission for Air Quality Management in NCR and Adjoining Areas) — 2021: Statutory body replacing EPCA; coordinates air quality management across Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, UP, and Punjab. Has suo motu powers to issue binding directions including GRAP activation
- NCRPB (National Capital Region Planning Board): Under MoHUA; the funding channel for this scheme; coordinates regional infrastructure planning across the NCR
- CPCB (Central Pollution Control Board): Sets national air quality standards; maintains AQI monitoring network; oversees OCEMS (Online Continuous Emission Monitoring Systems)
- DPCC (Delhi Pollution Control Committee): State-level body; coordinates with CAQM; issues notices to violators; maintains Delhi-specific AQI monitoring
- SAFAR (System of Air Quality and Weather Forecasting and Research): IMD/MoES-operated real-time air quality and forecast system for Delhi, Mumbai, Pune, Ahmedabad
- National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) — set by CPCB: PM2.5 ≤ 60 μg/m³ (annual), 40 μg/m³ (24-hr); PM10 ≤ 100 μg/m³; NOx ≤ 80 μg/m³. WHO guideline: PM2.5 ≤ 5 μg/m³ (annual) — India’s standard is 12× more lenient
- GRAP (Graded Response Action Plan): SC-directed emergency response when AQI crosses thresholds in Delhi-NCR:
Stage I: AQI 201–300 (Poor)
Stage II: AQI 301–400 (Very Poor)
Stage III: AQI 401–450 (Severe)
Stage IV: AQI >450 (Severe+) — school closures, construction ban - NCAP (National Clean Air Programme) — 2019: Targets 40% reduction in PM2.5 and PM10 levels in 131 non-attainment cities by 2026 (vs 2017 baseline). City-level action plans; ₹10,566 crore allocated 2019–2026
- Vehicle Scrapping Policy (2021): National framework for phasing out old vehicles; Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facilities (RVSFs); incentivises certificate of deposit trading
- Trucks and buses — account for 36% of PM2.5 emissions while being only 3% of the total vehicle fleet — the highest pollution-per-vehicle ratio; primary target of the new scheme
- Two-wheelers and cars — large in number but individually lower polluters; BS-VI transition largely complete for new vehicles since April 2020
- Diesel generators — widespread backup power use in Delhi-NCR; significant contributor to localised PM and NOx levels; CAQM has imposed DG restrictions during high-pollution days
- Interstate traffic — thousands of trucks entering Delhi-NCR daily from other states (UP, Haryana, Rajasthan) carrying older vehicles that don’t meet city standards — a cross-border pollution problem the scheme directly addresses
- Stubble burning (paddy residue burning) — Punjab and Haryana farmers burning crop residue post-harvest (Oct–Nov) contributes 30–40% of Delhi’s worst AQI days; CAQM has been unable to fully curb this despite Supreme Court directions
- Construction dust — massive infrastructure development across NCR; construction and demolition debris a major PM10 source; CAQM mandates dust suppression measures
- Industrial emissions — brick kilns, stone crushing units, and industrial clusters in NCR fringe areas; OCEMS mandated but compliance patchy
- Biomass burning — household burning of wood and biomass for cooking and heating in peri-urban and rural parts of NCR
- Secondary aerosol formation — chemical reactions between NOx, SO2, and ammonia (from agriculture) form secondary PM2.5 particles that are invisible at source but highly harmful
| Scheme / Policy | Key Provisions & Linkage to Current Scheme |
|---|---|
| NCAP (National Clean Air Programme — 2019) | Targets 40% reduction in PM2.5/PM10 in 131 non-attainment cities by 2026 (vs 2017 baseline). Delhi-NCR is the prime focus area. The new vehicle replacement scheme directly contributes to NCAP targets for Delhi by addressing the highest per-vehicle pollution source. |
| Vehicle Scrappage Policy (2021) | National framework for end-of-life vehicles — mandatory fitness testing, registered vehicle scrapping facilities (RVSFs), Certificate of Deposit (scrap token) enabling purchase benefit. The new scheme operationalises this at scale in Delhi-NCR for commercial vehicles. |
| FAME-II (Faster Adoption of EVs) + PM E-Drive | Central scheme subsidising EV purchase; FAME-II covered e-buses and e-2 wheelers. PM E-Drive (2024, ₹10,900 crore) specifically promotes e-buses and e-trucks — complementary to the NCR replacement scheme for fleet owners choosing EVs over BS-VI CNG. |
| BS-VI Leapfrog (April 2020) | India skipped Euro 5 / BS-V and jumped directly to Euro 6 / BS-VI for all new vehicles — one of the fastest clean fuel transitions globally. Enabled by simultaneous upgrade to BS-VI quality fuel (10 ppm sulphur) by all oil companies from April 2020. |
| GRAP (Graded Response Action Plan) — SC-mandated | Emergency short-term response framework activated by CAQM when Delhi AQI crosses thresholds. Includes truck entry bans (BS-IV and below) during Stage II+. The new scheme creates a permanent structural solution supplementing GRAP’s emergency restrictions. |
| CAQM (Commission for Air Quality Management) — 2021 | Statutory body with overriding powers over state governments on air quality in NCR and adjoining areas. Can issue legally binding directions; suo motu jurisdiction. The vehicle scheme is consistent with CAQM’s mandated reduction of commercial vehicle-sourced PM2.5 in the region. |
- Maximum pollution per rupee — targeting commercial heavy vehicles (trucks/buses) which emit 36% of PM2.5 from just 3% of the fleet is the most cost-effective pollution intervention; far higher leverage than targeting passenger cars
- Incentive-led approach — unlike coercive bans that cause economic hardship, the scheme provides financial incentives (5% interest subvention, fuel vouchers, registration waivers) to make compliance affordable for small-scale transporters
- Delhi-specific stringency — requiring EVs for light goods vehicles in Delhi and BS-VI CNG/electric only for buses within Delhi city reflects evidence-based tiering of standards based on pollution severity
- Complementarity with Vehicle Scrappage Policy, FAME-II, and PM E-Drive creates a coherent ecosystem — each scheme reinforcing the others
- Vehicles excluded — government vehicles (which include a significant share of Delhi’s aging bus fleet) are excluded from the scheme’s benefits — a missed opportunity given the public sector’s large share of heavy vehicle pollution
- Non-vehicular sources unaddressed — stubble burning (30–40% contribution during peak months) remains outside this scheme’s scope; vehicular action alone cannot achieve NCAP targets without addressing agricultural burning
- Livelihood impact on transporters — 2.07 lakh vehicle owners, many of them small fleet operators, face forced scrapping; the incentive package may not fully offset the capital cost differential between BS-VI and older vehicles for economically marginal operators
- 2-year timeframe — replacing 2.07 lakh vehicles in 2 years is ambitious; past scrappage schemes saw low uptake due to registration complications, RVSF availability gaps, and financial constraints of small transporters
- Include government vehicles: The scheme’s exclusion of government vehicles is inconsistent — DTC buses, state transport corporations of Haryana, Rajasthan, and UP operating in NCR must be brought under a parallel compulsory upgrade programme. Government fleets should set the standard, not be exempt from it.
- Stubble burning parallel action: Delhi’s worst pollution episodes (Oct–Nov) are driven by agricultural stubble burning in Punjab and Haryana. The vehicle replacement scheme must run alongside a scaled-up Crop Residue Management scheme — subsidising Happy Seeders, bio-decomposers, and ex-situ use — otherwise vehicular gains are erased every winter.
- RVSF network expansion: For scrapping mandates to work, Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facilities must be set up in adequate numbers across NCR — current RVSF density is insufficient for 2.07 lakh vehicle throughput in 2 years. NITI Aayog and MoRTH must fast-track RVSF licensing.
- Extend scheme to other polluted cities: The NCR-focused scheme is a model that should be replicated in Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, and other NCAP non-attainment cities — where aging commercial fleets are equally problematic. A national Commercial Vehicle Fleet Modernisation Programme should be the logical next step.
- AQI-linked incentive scaling: Incentive quantum should be dynamically linked to AQI severity — higher incentives during peak pollution months (Oct–Feb) to encourage faster transition; lower baseline incentives in cleaner months. This creates a market signal aligned with environmental urgency.
- Align NAAQS with WHO guidelines: India’s PM2.5 annual standard of 60 μg/m³ is 12× more lenient than WHO’s 5 μg/m³ guideline. While immediate convergence is impractical, a credible decade-long roadmap to progressively tighten NAAQS — as part of a revised NCAP 2.0 — must be announced to signal India’s long-term air quality commitment.
“Delhi-NCR’s air quality crisis is a multi-source, multi-seasonal, and multi-jurisdictional problem that cannot be solved by targeting any single source in isolation.” In the context of the Cabinet’s ₹9,585 crore scheme to replace BS-IV and older commercial vehicles with BS-VI/EV alternatives, critically examine the significance of this intervention, its limitations in addressing Delhi’s overall pollution profile, and suggest a comprehensive integrated air quality action plan that addresses all major pollution sources including vehicular, agricultural, industrial, and construction dust.
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