0.2949
7667766266
x

Tackling Delhi Air Pollution

iasparliament Logo
July 05, 2025

Mains syllabus: GS3 - Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation

Why in the news?

Recently, the Commission for Air Quality Management directed that all end-of-life vehicles (ELV) will not be given fuel in Delhi starting July 1, 2025.

To know about the causes of Delhi’s Air Pollution , Click Here.

What are the existing air pollution regulatory mechanisms in Delhi?

  • Commission for Air Quality Management in NCR & Adjoining Areas (CAQM) - It has been set up for Air Quality Management in National Capital Region and Adjoining Areas for better co-ordination and resolution of problems surrounding the air quality index.
  • End-of-Life Vehicle Action – CAQM has banned the old vehicles with are 10 years for diesel/ 15 years for petrol vehicles.
  • Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) – It is a set of emergency measures implemented in the Delhi-NCR region to combat air pollution.
  • It is activated based on the daily average Air Quality Index (AQI) in Delhi and involves a series of actions to be taken at different AQI levels.

Stages of GRAP

Action to be Taken

Stage I: Poor (AQI 201-300)

  • Public advisories are issued
  • Dust control measures are intensified,
  • Restrictions on open burning are enforced,
  • Orders on overaged diesel/petrol vehicles are enforced.

Stage II: Very Poor (AQI 301-400)

  • Actions from Stage I continue.
  • Restrictions on diesel generator sets are imposed.
  • Mechanized sweeping and road-dust sprinkling are enhanced.
  • Targeted actions at pollution hotspots are implemented.

Stage III: Severe (AQI 401-450)

  • Actions from Stages I and II continue.
  • Construction activities are restricted.
  • Heavy vehicle entry is limited.
  • Brick kiln operations are suspended.
  • Restrictions on BS III petrol and BS IV diesel light motor vehicles (LMVs) are imposed.

Stage IV: Severe+ (AQI >450)

  • Actions from Stages I, II, and III continue.
  • Complete halt on construction and demolition activities.
  • School closures may be considered.
  • Stricter traffic control measures, potentially including odd-even schemes, are implemented.
  • Industrial units may face shutdowns

 

  • BS-VI Compliance - Starting November 1, 2025, only BS-VI compliant, CNG, or electric commercial vehicles from outside Delhi will be allowed entry.
  • Anti-Pollution Devices - The use of anti-smog guns, water sprinklers, and dust suppression measures is being enforced.
  • End-of-Life Vehicle Action - The Delhi government is taking action against old, polluting vehicles (15 years for petrol, 10 years for diesel).
  • Prevention of Stubble Burning – CAQM has recommended in-situ and ex-situ management of stubble burning in villages in Punjab and Haryana around New Delhi.

Other Measures Taken

Category

Key Actions

Green Initiatives

  • 7 million saplings planted under ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam’

Waste Management

  • Landfills clearing target by 2027-2028
  • Expansion of waste-to-energy plants
  • Promotion of  waste segregation

Innovative Solutions

  • Cloud seeding pilot programme
  • ‘Startup Innovation Challenge’

Public Engagement

  • SMS alerts for vehicle owners;
  • Community monitoring by ‘Environment Doots’

What are the challenges associated?

  • Failure in emission compliance the failure to strictly enforce emission compliance on all vehicles on the road, not just the old ones.
  • More responsibility on owners – Shifting environment responsibility to the vehicle owners considering vehicle age as a sole criterion for pollution, rather focusing on engine, fuel efficacy with policy framework, keeping more burden on vehicle owners.
  • Regulatory gaps - Inefficient testing frameworks, and poor enforcement of fuel efficiency standards reveals a troubling reality.
  • Incomplete policy framework - Policy emphasis given on age rather the working efficiency of the vehicles.
  • Problems with vehicle scrapping ecosystem - most ELVs end up with unauthorized scrap dealers or are resold in states with laxer rules, merely shifting pollution elsewhere.
  • Overlooking circular economy - The embedded emissions associated with manufacturing new vehicles are ignored, effecting overall emission compliance.

What measures can be taken?

  • Creating robust fuel and emissions control strategy – Policy may be driven by emission and fuel compliance rather just the age of the vehicles.
  • Enhancing Infrastructure - With the planned installation of ANPR cameras, Delhi can create an automated system to restrict entry for high-emitting vehicles based on real-time data.
  • Market-based mechanisms - Considering transferable scrapping credits linked to Aadhaar and vehicle registration, which can reward owners scrapping vehicles with incentives or offset allowances for new purchases or public transport usage.
  • Compliance-based support – People who are complying with regulations should be encouraged further.

What lies ahead?

  • Recently, Delhi government unveiled ambitious Air Pollution Mitigation Plan 2025, which can bring together technology, stricter rules, and public support to fight pollution.
  • The plan’s success will depend on how well is carried out and how much nearby states cooperate, and it can be a model for the other major cities in India tackling air-pollution.

Reference

NewIndianexpress | India's tailpipe pollution regime needs urgent reform

Login or Register to Post Comments
There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to review.

ARCHIVES

MONTH/YEARWISE ARCHIVES

sidetext
Free UPSC Interview Guidance Programme
sidetext