Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Delhi to get over 750 CNG buses this year as stopgap

- Sweta Goswami

NEW DELHI: Over 750 new CNG buses in the Capital will, by the end of the year, replace 560 over-aged ones that will have to be phased out by September 2023, said Delhi Transport Corporatio­n (DTC) officials aware of the matter. The buses will act as a “stopgap”, officials said, till 1,500 electric buses enter Delhi’s public transit fleet.

The decision is a policy shift for the Delhi government, which in October last year decided that it will only induct electric buses into its fleet and that an order of 800 CNG buses placed in two parts to replace old cluster buses would be the last lot of fuel-powered ones to hit the city’s streets.

However, officials said electric buses, which rely on significan­tly more modern production techniques, take longer to build and supply than convention­al Cng-powered ones that can be added to a fleet within six months of an order being placed.

The state transport body faces a major challenge — replacing 99% of its fleet of 3,760 buses by September 2025, when they will be taken off the roads due to their age, and officials said this yawning shortfall

DTC buses transport 3.3mn passengers every day on an average in Delhi, almost a million more than the Metro, making it crucial that the corporatio­n replaces its ageing bus fleet

Current fleet

buses

E-buses

by September 2023

by March 2023

is unlikely to be met solely by electric buses, due to extant production constraint­s.

“We have already ordered 300 e-buses, 150 of which are running on city roads. DTC will procure another 1,500 e-buses, which will start coming from next year. But, the e-bus manufactur­ing sector is still relatively

Buses to be phased out by September 2025

from Oct 2024 to March 2025 new and hence takes longer than a CNG bus. Since our demand is urgent and public transport is an essential service, we are going to procure 758 CNG buses immediatel­y as a stopgap arrangemen­t. But, our focus on making more e-bus purchases will continue,” said a senior DTC official, who

by April 2025 to Sept 2025

ADDITIONS THAT WILL BE MADE TO DELHI’S BUS FLEET E-buses:

asked not to be named.

The DTC floated its first tender for 300 e-buses in December 2020 and the first lot (of 150 e-buses) arrived on May 25 this year. Officials attributed this delay to Covid-induced lockdowns, which affected manufactur­ing units, a problem unlikely to be a factor now that the economy has opened up.

The DTC alone carries 3.3 million passengers on an average daily in Delhi, almost a million more than the Delhi Metro and the highest of any citybased state transport utility in the country.

Government data showed that of DTC’S 3,760 buses, 3,246 CNG ones will have to be phased out by September 2025.

Of these, 171 will be phased out by March 2023, and then 397 by September 2023. Then, between October 2024 and March 2025, the city will lose 1,237 of its existing Cng-powered buses.

The remaining 1,441 will be gone between April 2025 and September 2025.

In October 2021, transport minister Kailash Gahlot told HT that the Delhi government has decided to procure only electric buses for public transport in the future. To this end, DTC had started work to upgrade its bus depots with EV charging infrastruc­ture.

It has set a 2024 target to enable all 13 depots with the requisite facilities.

The 150 new e-buses deployed in Delhi are expected to run 108 million kilometres and save the Capital 43.2 million kg of fossil fuel worth ₹240 crore.

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