
Old doesn't mean unfit: Judge car not by age, but condition, say end-of-life vehicle owners in NCR
Tired of too many ads? go ad free now
"My car is parked in the garage, and I have been taking cabs to go to Delhi. Imagine," says Pachauri, whose diesel-powered sedan has run less than 1 lakh km in 10 years. "The car is in good running condition. I have an up-to-date Pollution Under Control (PUC) certificate for it. When I bought the car in 2015, I also paid a one-time road tax for 15 years. Despite adhering to all norms, I can't run my car in NCR. The system is forcing me to purchase a new car without getting any meaningful price for my old vehicle," adds Pachauri, saying cars should be judged by emissions and running condition rather than the sole criteria of age.
Based on a 2015 NGT order and subsequent rulings by the Supreme Court that diesel vehicles over 10 years old and petrol vehicles more than 15 should be deemed "high-polluting" and EOL (end-of-life) vehicles and taken off roads, Delhi govt had announced they would not be given fuel from July 1, and the vehicles would be seized if seen on roads.
But implementation proved thorny. A mix of logistical issues, such as inconsistent rollout timelines across states, and emotional ones—like the distress of parting with a still-functioning car—have made enforcement unpopular.
On Thursday, the govt backtracked from it, citing public sentiment. Noida police, however, forged ahead and impounded 76 EOLVs between July 1 and 4 alone. In Delhi, around 90 were seized till July 3.
While a policy decision is yet to be taken, the deadline to scrap or shift EOL vehicles from the five high-density NCR districts of Gautam Budh Nagar, Ghaziabad, Gurgaon, Faridabad and Sonipat remains Nov 1 as of now, with plans to cover the rest of the districts in the region by April 2026.
Tired of too many ads? go ad free now
The order, meanwhile, has left many vehicle owners, like Pachauri, anguished about making a fresh investment in a new car—a new car like Nissan Sunny would cost over Rs 20 lakh—when there is nothing wrong with their old vehicle.
"The rule seems to be blind to individual realities, especially for vehicles that saw minimal use during the pandemic and are still roadworthy," says IT professional Sapan Rastogi, a resident of Greater Noida's Gaur City, whose diesel Renault Duster has run just 52,000 km in nearly nine years.
"We hardly used it for two Covid years. But we made so many memories—from office runs to trips across Rajasthan and Himachal.
It's not just a car—it's part of our family history," he says.
In Noida's Sector 51, Sanjeev Kumar's white Volkswagen Vento, a 14-year-old petrol car, has clocked just 58,000 km. "It's well maintained. I've replaced parts, serviced it regularly. It even saved my family's life once during a near-fatal accident," Kumar says.
On a family trip to Saharanpur, Kumar dozed off while driving, only to jolt awake as the car spun dangerously before coming to a halt—without flipping. "We could have died that day. But the car protected us. Now I'm being told to throw it away," he says.
'Policy helps car makers, not the environment'
Across Noida and Gurgaon, nearly 3 lakh vehicles now face the EOL label—around 40,000 diesel and 1.68 lakh petrol vehicles in Noida alone and over 98,000 vehicles, most of them diesel, in Gurgaon.
In Delhi, there were over 60 lakh overage vehicles till March this year.
In the absence of fitness-based extensions or buyback schemes, the policy is forcing people to either relocate their vehicles to states without EOL restrictions or dispose of them entirely—often for a fraction of their worth.
Meanwhile, the irony is cars banned in Delhi-NCR continue to run in Karnataka, Rajasthan, or Bihar, simply shifting the pollution elsewhere.
Sumil Jalota from Greater Noida West recently sold his 2016 Maruti Suzuki Ertiga to a buyer in Karnataka, where the EOL rules haven't yet kicked in. "It was perfectly fine," he says. "But next year it would've been worthless. I had no choice."
He has now booked a new Kia Carens, costing several lakhs more. "It's a burden on middle-class families like ours. This rule helps car manufacturers, not the environment." Experts claim that while older vehicles can contribute more to pollution, the current policy doesn't factor in condition or emissions testing.
"There is no concrete scientific study isolating ELV pollution levels in NCR. Blanket bans based on age, without condition-based checks, can miss the actual polluters," a scientist at the Central Road Research Institute (CRRI) says.
That is also a central complaint among owners.
"Why punish an owner whose car is well maintained and PUC-compliant?" asks Alok Singh, a Greater Noida resident whose Mahindra Scorpio will hit its 10-year mark next year.
"Some newer cars pollute more due to neglect. We're targeting the wrong end."
Singh estimates that replacing his Scorpio will cost nearly Rs 20 lakh, while his current one would barely fetch Rs 2 lakh. "How can a salaried person afford that? There's no subsidy, no compensation. It's not just bad policy—it's anti-poor."
Like many others, he argued that a more sustainable approach would be to strengthen public transport and implement rigorous fitness testing, rather than enforcing blanket bans.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scroll.in
22 minutes ago
- Scroll.in
Rajasthan HC Driver application concludes today; apply now for 58 posts
Today, July 7, is the last date to apply for recruitment to the posts of Chauffeur for RHC and Driver for RSLSA, District Courts and DLSAs 2025. Applicants can submit their forms on the official website The recruitment drive aims to fill 58 vacancies, comprising 27 for Chauffeur and 31 for Driver positions. Candidates can check the eligibility criteria, pay scale, and other details available in the notification below: Here's the official notification. Application Fee Applicants from unreserved/ OBC and EBC (creamy layer)/ other category candidates are required to pay a fee of Rs 750, whereas Rs 600 applies to state's OBC and EBC (non-creamy layer)/ EWS. Applicants from SC/ ST will have to pay the fee of Rs 450. Steps to apply for Rajasthan HC Driver, Chauffeur posts


New Indian Express
an hour ago
- New Indian Express
EB hikes rates, EV charging stations in Tamil Nadu feel the heat
CHENNAI: Electric vehicle charging operators in Tamil Nadu are bracing for higher electricity bills as the state's power regulator raised both energy and fixed charges under a revised tariff structure, effective July 1. The Tamil Nadu Electricity Regulatory Commission (TNERC) has retained its time-of-day (ToD) model for EV charging — first introduced in 2023 — but increased rates across the board, triggering fresh concerns about the economics of public charging. Energy charges under the new structure now range from Rs 6.50 per kWh during solar hours (9am–4pm) to Rs 9.75 during peak hours (6am–9am and 6pm–10pm), up from Rs 9.45. Night charging (10 pm–6 am) is priced at `8.10, compared to Rs 7.85 earlier. More significantly, fixed charges for high-tension (HT) charging stations have more than doubled, from Rs 145 to Rs 304 per kVA per month. Unlike energy charges, these apply regardless of usage and are based on sanctioned load. For example, a 50kW fast-charging station will now pay Rs 2,750 in monthly fixed charges, up from Rs 1,300 (excluding electricity tax). 'Our average cost of power was around Rs 9 to Rs 9.50 per kWh before July. Following the tariff revision, it has gone up by Rs 2.50 per unit — a 20% increase in our power cost,' said K P Karthikeyan, director of Indian Charge Point Operators Association. 'This is a fixed cost, and while the impact could taper as utilisation improves, public charging stations typically operate at just 5-6% utilisation, and rarely exceed 10%. Even in the best-case scenario, utilisation levels may not cross 15-16%. So, at current usage levels, the hike effectively translates to a 20% cost escalation.'


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
300-cr bridge to link Coastal Rd at Haji Ali with arterial Parel path
Mumbai: A new elevated road is being proposed to connect Senapati Bapat Marg -- leading towards Phoenix Mills and Kamla Mills -- with the Haji Ali end of Lala Lajpatrai Road, where the coastal road has designated entry and exit points. If it goes as planned, people travelling from the crowded areas of Parel, Dadar, Matunga, and Mahim could soon reach the coastal road near Haji Ali junction within minutes. The proposed six-lane elevated corridor, currently a missing link in the city's east-west connectivity, will skirt along the edge of Mahalaxmi Racecourse and pass near the NSCI Dome. Officials from the urban development department said the project will not require any land acquisition, nor will it disrupt the existing flow of traffic during construction. The viaduct will begin near the coastal road's entry/exit on Lala Lajpatrai Road, pass through open areas alongside the race track and stadia, and land near the E Moses Road end of Senapati Bapat Marg. From there, motorists will have seamless access to Gokhale Road, Lady Jamshed Road, Bhavani Shankar Road, NM Joshi Marg, and onward to key locations like Siddhivinayak Temple, Shivaji Park, Lower Parel, and Mahim. You Can Also Check: Mumbai AQI | Weather in Mumbai | Bank Holidays in Mumbai | Public Holidays in Mumbai Although the final project estimate is yet to be determined, the 1.5-km-long corridor is likely to cost Rs 250-300 crore. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 2025 Top Trending local enterprise accounting software [Click Here] Esseps Learn More Undo The new link is expected to offer a major reduction in travel time -- by as much as 30 minutes during peak hours -- and decongest several traffic chokepoints. At present, traffic coming from Haji Ali (via Tardeo, Pedder Road, Bhulabhai Desai Road, or the coastal road) must take a long detour through Worli Naka (via Annie Besant Road or Pandurang Budhkar Marg), Nehru Science Centre road, or Keshavrao Khadye Marg-Dr E Moses Road, loop around the racecourse and NSCI Dome to reach Dadar. Southbound traffic from Dadar and Parel must follow the same roundabout route. Deputy CM Eknath Shinde, whose office unveiled the proposal in coordination with the public works department (PWD), called the project a transformative move for the city's infrastructure. While implementing agencies are yet to be finalised, the plan has been received positively due to its promise to cut travel time and ease congestion without displacing people or requiring land acquisition. Shinde said: "It is more than just an infrastructure project; it's a visionary step toward Mumbai's future. Our goal is to make the city traffic jam-free. This signal-free corridor will enable smooth, uninterrupted travel. We are committed to building a faster, cleaner MMR that respects Mumbaikars' time and space."