The Asian Age

A welcome step

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The Supreme Court has been sensitive to environmen­tal concerns, and to the incalculab­ly high toll on the health of the population inflicted by vehicular fumes, in ordering on Wednesday that BS-III compliant motor vehicles — commercial transport, three-wheelers or twowheeler­s make up the bulk of already produced stock in that category — will not be sold by any manufactur­er or dealer starting April 1 this year, and that no transport authority in the country shall register them from that date.

The court has rightly taken a strong view of the fact that the manufactur­ers didn’t take any proactive steps to move full-scale to producing motor vehicles compliant with Bharat Stage-IV norms sufficient­ly early, when the March 31 deadline for ending the BS-III vehicles was known long in advance.

Indeed, the January-March data for the current year shows production was rapid in this period. This suggests inventorie­s were piled up with a calculatio­n, possibly in the hope that the courts would permit some time to dispose of stocks. Now that the petroleum ministry has spent `30,000 crores to upgrade to the production of fuel fit for BS-IV vehicles, there is less reason to succumb to the victimhood aspect of the manufactur­ers’ pleadings.

While taking the right step on this matter, the courts must also appreciate that total pollution, specially in our bigger cities, is unlikely to show any significan­t decrease unless the number of vehicles on our roads are seriously reduced. That means public policies must increasing­ly focus on expanded and more efficient public transport systems and disincenti­vising the motor vehicles trade.

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