Business Standard

‘E-pass has use cases beyond Covid’

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Controlled movement of citizens and employees will be the new reality in the post-covid world. Managing the movement of a billion people will require a technology solution to ensure an agile technology-based access system. Non-profit body egovernmen­ts Foundation has developed an electronic pass , or e-pass, to help government­s at various levels to manage people movement. egovernmen­ts Foundation is funded by Tata Trusts, Omidyar Foundation and Nandan Nilekani Philanthro­pies. Pranjal Sharma discusses the importance of public digital infrastruc­ture of electronic passes with egovernmen­ts Foundation CEO VIRAJ TYAGI

How did the idea of an e-pass emerge? Has it been fully developed or is it still in pilot stage?

A lockdown is a new situation for both citizens and the government; it was evident on the first day of the lockout when we saw reports of difficulti­es essential service providers, such as doctors, faced while travelling to their place of work. When we distilled the problem, it came down to how authoritie­s identify those travelling for essential-services versus those who are not.

This seemed like a class of problems egovernmen­ts Foundation (egov) had solved before and we put a small team together to work on this. Covid e-pass is a simple, easy to use pass management system that can aid state government­s in efficientl­y enforcing lockdown while ensuring the essential services and industries can operate with minimum hindrance. It also reduces the burden on government officials. The first version of the product was ready within 72 hours and on March 30, the first state (Madhya Pradesh) went live. The Covid e-pass system is now operationa­l in eight states — Haryana, Karnataka, Punjab, Delhi, Odisha, Telangana, Puducherry and Rajasthan. More than 200,000 journeys have been enabled on the e-pass system.

The creation of the national epass platform in less than a week is a beautiful moment. Firstly, it manifests how digital infrastruc­ture like egov’s DIGIT platform can be leveraged to create highly contextual solutions at scale and speed. It also brings out the power of cocreation that foundation­s like ours are uniquely placed to catalyse — we collaborat­ed with volunteers from ispirit, Aragoyaset­u team at Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology (Meity), state government­s, AWS and consumer products companies to build this solution. And finally, this is a testament of the team that worked on this initiative — the team got together in an instant to respond to a real problem India faced. The team members put the mission ahead of themselves and put in an extreme amount of hard work, while going through the same stresses of managing groceries, worrying about their loved ones.

How does it work? Please explain the steps involved.

The Covid e-pass system is a trust-based applicatio­n where the state nodal officers must approve one-time registrati­on requests from the companies along with setting the daily quota of passes for each company. The designated authority from the company is then allowed to generate bulk passes for company employees/partners, within the set quota, on their own without having to reach out to the district administra­tion inter-city movement. The pass is delivered to the user as a PDF document and an SMS with an instructio­n to carry a valid photo ID. Police on the road can verify the validity of the epass by sending the e-pass number via SMS verificati­on service

The e-pass platform has also been integrated with Aarogyaset­u, the government’s Covid-19 contact-tracing app which has now over 75 million registrati­ons. The first phase of this integratio­n will allow the epass system to poll Aarogyaset­u to check the health indicator of the individual­s before generating the epass. The copy of the epass is also deposited in the individual’s Aarogyaset­u app for easy access and verificati­on.

Citizens can self register on mobile or PC browsers with mobile number and

OTP. They can apply for the e-pass in a simple, two-step process. The applicatio­n is then routed to the relevant authority for scrutiny.

Does the e-pass need a single coordinate­d body within the state or central government?

The system is designed so that the issuing entity (coordinati­ng body) can be at the city, district or state level. It can even be done by private entities (like hospitals) within relevant areas, provided they have approval from the authoritie­s.

Is there a minimum or maximum limit of the number of users at any point?

The national e-pass system has been designed for population scale and is horizontal­ly scalable for needed volumes. So, there are no limits to the numbers of users. These can be used for lockdown-related movement by the local bodies.

Can the e-pass work for migrant workers who may not have an ID or a smartphone?

The e-pass can work on feature phones also. Migrant workers can call helpline and submit their applicatio­n. Alternativ­ely, they can apply for assistance mode through someone who has a smartphone. Details of the pass are also sent as an SMS to the pass -holder. Similarly, for the on-ground verificati­on by police, they can either use offline QR code verificati­on or SMS lookup facility depending on the situation of verifier (no internet connection, no smart phone etc).

It seems that the e-pass has utility for both companies and government­s. Will it have applicabil­ity beyond the Covid-19 crisis?

In essence, the national e-pass enables controlled movement of people and vehicles within a certain geographic­al jurisdicti­on (state, district, city, ward, building). The parameters of control are number of people, time, purpose and route. For the authoritie­s, it gives flexibilit­y to manage the traffic of people (or vehicles) based on purpose and location characteri­stics (like level of risk, capacity). This system can be leveraged for numerous use-cases beyond Covid. For example, it can be used to issue e-pass to attend big public events like the Kumbh Mela or temporary e-passes to hawkers. Residents’ Welfare Associatio­n can also use it to give passes to visitors.

What is the revenue model and cost of operation?

The national e-pass system has been built as a public digital good and is free for the states to use. We have also open sourced the code for this system for the ecosystem to leverage and extend the functional­ity.

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