The unruly chaos of Delhi's roads would be unrecognisable without the rickshaws and scooters that zip through India's capital in their millions, emitting toxic fumes in their wake. But now, ambitious policies aim to give the city's most recognisable vehicles an environmental makeover. This was reported by Qazaqyia.kz citing The Guardian.
On Monday, Delhi's government announced plans to eventually ban petrol scooters, motorbikes and autorickshaws in favour of those running on electricity, in an attempt to bring down dangerously high pollution levels in the city by the end of the decade.
The policies, which will phase out new petrol and gas scooters, trucks and buses in the capital over the next two years, have been hailed by some environmentalists as a "gamechanger" in the fight to bring down toxic emissions.
In recent years, transport has been one of the highest contributors to Delhi's air pollution, which is consistently at levels dangerously high to human health and has become an emergency in the capital, linked to tens of thousands of deaths each year.
Scooters and rickshaws – which largely run on petrol and compressed fossil gas – account for more than two-thirds of the tens of millions of vehicles on Delhi's roads. Under the new policy, India's capital will now issue new licence plates only to electric small trucks and three-wheelers, known as e-rickshaws, from 2027, and to e-scooters and electric motorbikes from 2028.
The Delhi government said it hoped the move would lead to an electrification of at least 30% of the capital's vehicle fleet by 2030. "The policy focuses on pure EVs, which offer superior environmental benefits as zero-emission vehicles," Delhi's government said in a statement on Monday.
Amit Bhatt, the managing director of the International Council on Clean Transportation, said: "The proposed phaseout of two- and three-wheelers could be a gamechanger in Delhi's fight against air pollution."
Emphasising that scooters, rickshaws and trucks accounted for most of the vehicles on Delhi's roads, Bhatt added that "accelerating their transition to zero-emission vehicles can significantly reduce vehicular emissions, improve public health, and pave the way for a broader transition to zero-emission transport across all vehicle segments".
The Delhi state government, run by the Bharatiya Janata party, which also governs at national level, had faced significant criticism and numerous protests during the winter after it was accused of doing nothing to tackle the dangerously high pollution levels that lasted for months.
According to the government's own figures, vehicle emissions count for an average of 23% of pollutants in the air, making it the highest single source of emissions, particularly during the toxic winter months when a thick smog routinely cloaks the city.
E-rickshaws have become an increasingly familiar sight on Delhi's roads over the past two years, but the lack of charging points has made drivers reluctant to switch over. Under the new policy, the government has pledged to establish more than 30,000 public charging points across the capital.
Vikas Nimesh, an assistant professor at the School of Public Policy at IIT Delhi, also used the phrase "gamechanger". He emphasised that the availability of affordable Indian electric vehicles was rapidly expanding, with Delhi already India's largest market. Nimesh expressed optimism that the new policy would provide impetus for manufacturers to invest in new green technology and "come up with more EV models" to provide greater consumer choice and competition.
News of the policy had yet to reach most of the city's millions of auto-rickshaw drivers. Sitting in the shade of his rickshaw cab, parked in Delhi's busy Connaught Place, Rajesh Gopi, 37, said he was sceptical that any real transition could take place in only two years and worried the electric vehicles would not provide the same earnings.
"I have heard that the e-rickshaws need charging a lot and can't travel as far as we can on gas," he said. "If I have to wait one or two hours every day for charging, that's lost income for me that I can't afford. I also don't know how to maintain an e-rickshaw or stop the batteries getting stolen."
However, he conceded that the city's pollution was unbearable for rickshaw drivers forced to breathe in deadly fumes. "I am not against change and making the air clean, but I hope we are not the ones to pay the price," said Gopi.
The policy also introduced significant road and vehicle tax exemptions for people buying new electric cars, in an attempt to incentivise drivers to switch over by choice. However, some critics expressed concern that two years was too short a window to phase out new petrol scooters and rickshaws and ensure there was enough consumer choice.
Others raised concern that the policy should have a wider focus beyond just private vehicles. Bhavreen Kandhari, a prominent environmentalist, said the government should also commit to expanding green public transport in the city. While Delhi has a substantial metro system, it is often criticised for lack of connectivity across the vast city, which keeps people reliant on flagging down rickshaws and driving their own scooters between their homes.
