Delhi’s Fuel Ban for Old Vehicles: Legal Rules, Challenges, and Pollution Impact

Delhi Fuel Ban

Delhi Fuel Ban Latest News

  • Facing backlash over the fuel ban for old vehicles, the Delhi Government announced that end-of-life vehicles will not be impounded.Ā 
  • Environment Minister of Delhi said a new system for handling old vehicles is being planned.Ā 
  • The Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) directive to remove end-of-life vehicles from roads is based on long-standing court orders and serious environmental concerns.

Delhi’s Fuel Ban for Old Vehicles

  • Starting July 1, diesel vehicles over 10 years old and petrol vehicles over 15 years old are denied fuel at Delhi’s fuel stations under the CAQM directive.
    • In April 2025, the CAQM directed a phased denial of fuel to ELVs at fuel stations in the NCR:
      • in Delhi from July 1,Ā 
      • in high-density NCR districts from November 1, andĀ 
      • in the rest of the NCR from April 1, 2026.

Real-Time Enforcement with ANPR Technology

  • 498 fuel stations and 3 ISBTs now have Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) cameras.
  • These scan vehicle plates and cross-check with the VAHAN database.
  • If identified as an End-of-Life Vehicle (ELV), an audio alert is triggered, and fuel is denied.

Enforcement and Penalties

  • ELVs may be impounded and scrapped unless valid exemptions or documents are shown.
  • Enforcement teams include the Transport Department, Traffic Police, and civic bodies.

Delhi Government Flags Premature Implementation

  • Delhi Environment Minister, in a letter to CAQM, called the immediate enforcement of the fuel ban ā€œpremature and potentially counterproductiveā€.
  • The Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) system is facing multiple issues:
    • Camera misplacement
    • Non-functional sensors and speakers
    • Inability to detect ELVs due to HSRP-related issues
  • The system lacks integration with vehicle databases of adjoining NCR districts, making it easy for vehicle owners to bypass the ban by refueling in nearby areas.
  • Due to these technological and operational issues, the public is facing inconvenience, leading to widespread discontent and backlash.

Why Older Vehicles Are a Concern

  • Authorities say pre-BS-VI vehicles significantly contribute to air pollution, even if maintained well.
    • BS-IV vehicles emit 4.5 to 5.5 times more particulate matter than BS-VI vehicles.
    • BS-VI norms became mandatory from April 1, 2020, setting stricter emission standards.
  • Transport sector accounts for: 28% of PM2.5; 41% of SOā‚‚; 78% of NOx emissions. CAQM highlights transport as a key driver of Delhi’s air pollution.
  • While legal mandates for banning overage vehicles existed since 2015, lack of technology delayed enforcement.

NGT’s 2015 Ban on Old Vehicles

  • In 2015, the National Green Tribunal (NGT) banned - Diesel vehicles older than 10 years; Petrol vehicles older than 15 years - from operating or being registered in Delhi-NCR.
  • In 2018, the Supreme Court upheld the NGT’s directive and ordered that violating vehicles must be impounded.

New Scrapping Rules Reinforce Mandate

  • In 2023, Delhi framed guidelines under the Motor Vehicles Act and Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facility (RVSF) Rules.
  • The Environment Protection (End-of-Life Vehicles) Rules, 2025, effective April 1, mandate scrapping within 180 days of a vehicle’s registration expiry.

Legal Basis Under Motor Vehicles Act

  • Motor Vehicles Act, 1988: Registration for non-transport vehicles valid for 15 years, renewable thereafter.
  • Central Motor Vehicles Rules, 1999: After expiry, a vehicle is no longer considered validly registered.

Effectiveness of Such Measures in Dealing with Delhi’s Bad Air Problem

  • Experts agree that no single measure, including the fuel ban for old vehicles, can fully resolve Delhi’s severe air quality crisis.
  • The Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) cautions that age caps aren’t scalable nationwide and older vehicles aren’t the only polluters.Ā 
  • Poor maintenance can make even newer vehicles highly polluting.

Multi-Pronged Approach Needed

  • CSE advocates a comprehensive strategy, including:
    • Upgrading fuel and emission standards
    • Strict Pollution-Under-Control (PUC) enforcement
    • Major expansion of public transport

Source: IEĀ | THĀ | IT

Delhi Fuel Ban FAQs

Q1: What is Delhi’s fuel ban for old vehicles?

Ans: As of July 1, old petrol/diesel vehicles are denied fuel under CAQM orders to reduce vehicular pollution.

Q2: Why are older vehicles targeted in Delhi?

Ans: Older vehicles, especially pre-BS-VI ones, emit significantly more pollutants, worsening Delhi’s already severe air quality.

Q3: What legal backing supports Delhi’s fuel ban?

Ans: The National Green Tribunal’s 2015 order, upheld by the Supreme Court in 2018, mandates removal of old vehicles.

Q4: What issues hamper enforcement of the ban?

Ans: Faulty ANPR tech, poor integration with NCR databases, and public backlash challenge implementation of the fuel ban.

Q5: Can this ban alone solve Delhi’s pollution?

Ans: Experts say no single measure works; coordinated action including stricter norms and public transport is essential.

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