In a radical step to curb alarming air pollution, Delhi Government today restricted plying of private vehicles bearing odd and even registration numbers to alternate days from January 1 in the national capital.
The measures were announced following an emergency meeting chaired by Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, a day after the Delhi High Court compared the city to a "gas chamber".
Chief Secretary K K Sharma said the government decided to shut down the Badarpur Thermal power station and will move the National Green Tribunal to close the Dadri power plant which falls in Uttar Pradesh.
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The government was also mulling to allow movement of trucks only after 11 PM as they slow down overall vehicular movement which was pointed out to be a major contributing factor to pollution from vehicular emission.
The city government has also decided to make it mandatory for vehicles to have Euro VI standards for vehicular emission from 2017, two years before the Centre's scheduled introduction of the same.
Sharma said public transport will be significantly augmented to take the load of increasing passengers due to the odd-even number restrictions.
All private vehicles even having registration numbers issued by neighbouring states will have to follow the odd-even number formula.
Emergency services and public transport will not be under the ambit of the restriction, Delhi Dialogue Commission Vice Chairperson Ashish Khetan said, while noting that the idea has been borrowed from foreign countries.
The Kejriwal government has been focusing on improving
public transport and introduced "car free day" in select areas. The government has announced that it will organise 'Car-Free Day' across the national capital on January 22.
The government said it aimed at cutting down vehicular pollution in the city by half with the measures it announced today.
"Every year pollution level increases in winter. From January 1, 2016, odd and even numbered vehicles will run on alternate days. Alternate arrangements are being made to bolster public transport. DTC buses, Metro services will ply extra. We are still working out the modalities," said the Chief Secretary.
He said a blue print will be prepared to implement the measures after holding talks with key stakeholders including traffic police, transport department and Municipal Corporation of Delhi.
The pollution levels in Delhi have risen significantly in the last few weeks.
Yesterday, the Delhi High Court had observed that the current air pollution levels in city have reached "alarming" proportions and it 'was akin to "living in a gas chamber". It had directed the Centre and city government to present comprehensive action plans to combat it.
A bench of justices Badar Durrez Ahmed and Sanjeev Sachdeva termed the action plans filed by the environment ministry and Delhi government as "not comprehensive" as they did not contain specific responsibilities of each authority and the timeline for carrying them out.
It directed them to file comprehensive action plans, which are the need of the hour, by December 21.
Union Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar yesterday had said air quality in Delhi has been going from bad to worse and the situation was "serious", claiming the government has prepared a one-year plan to improve it.