AAP's Delhi unit convener and Labour Minister Gopal Rai said "creating awareness" was the biggest success of the previous two rounds of the scheme, while alleging there were multiple attempts to "sabotage" its second round, enforced in April last year.
Rai was holding the transport portfolio when the previous two rounds were executed in Delhi. His comments come against the backdrop of the National Green Tribunal doubting the efficacy of the scheme.
"PM 2.5, of which vehicular combustion is a major source, is a pollutant that chokes the lungs and leads to other respiratory diseases. PM10 is also another major pollutant but that is the usually the dust on the roads and dust in itself is not harmful.
"But heavy vehicular traffic grinds the PM10 to PM 2.5, further aggravating the problem. With the odd-even scheme in place, we hope to bring this down," Rai said.
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"There has to be a holistic solution to the problem. The Centre should form a council comprising the states to tackle this menace which has multiple causes," Rai said.
Referring to the Delhi government's decision to make public transport free during the odd-even scheme next week, Rai hinted there could be few more such changes in the run up to the traffic-rationing move.
A landmark IIT-Kanpur study, which covered the period 2013-14, said during winters, vehicles are the second largest and the "most consistent" contributing source of pollutants PM10 and PM2.5.