“Primarily, we are of the view that diesel vehicles cause more pollution than other vehicles. We may be right, we may be wrong. We are open to modifying it,” a Bench, comprising Chief Justice TS Thakur, said.
The court also asked Delhi government, Environment Pollution Control Authority and taxi owners association to give a concrete roadmap for phasing out diesel taxis from NCR.
The Apex Court also indicated that all diesel cars, depending on their price and engine capacity, must pay one-time environment cess, which would be determined after deliberations. “We may start a symbolic cess on any person, who is buying a diesel vehicle which would be a one-time cess. What should be the scale, price, engine capacity is the thing to be deliberated upon. There has to be a rational basis to decide that,” the Bench said.
The observation came after Solicitor General Ranjit Kumar said that diesel was not the only “evil” responsible for the pollution and other fuels such as CNG and petrol also pollute the environment.
He said that petrol emits carbon monoxide, CNG vehicles release oxides of nitrogen, while diesel emits particulate matters all of which are polluting agents. He added the Centre had initiated ‘Make in India’ policy and the automobile sector could not be held responsible for pollution.
“If any automobile manufacturer is carrying out his business as per laws of the country, then putting any restrictions beyond those in law would not help in any way. Manufacturers can’t be held responsible for pollution in environment,” he said.
Referring to the 2015 IIT-Kanpur study, the Solicitor General said other sources of pollution like dust, stubble burning, etc, could not be undermined, which contribute significantly to pollution.
The Solicitor General said there are emission standards specified under the Motor Vehicles Rules. Elaborating on the steps taken by the Union government to reduce pollution, he said the Centre had imposed a ban on 15-year-old petrol vehicles, besides a ban on 10-year-old diesel vehicles.
“We have also enforced the ban on registration of new diesel luxury cars and SUVs with an engine capacity of over 2000 cc. A notification was also issued in December 2015 declaring a ban on burning of stubble,” he said.
The Bench then asked “how are you enforcing these rules? Laws are there but the real problem is of enforcement. Ban is imposed in Delhi. What have you done to enforce similar ban in UP, Haryana, Rajasthan, etc. You always say that you have launched a drive. Why don’t you enforce ban in these areas?”
“There is a problem of enforcement in this country. As a Central government, what is your concern that you have for pollution? The reduction in stubble burning is not because of you, it is because there is no stubble. Have you prosecuted people for stubble burning? Why did you not issue a notification on stubble before December last year,” it said.
Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for IT industry body National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM), told the court that restriction on plying of diesel run taxis in Delhi and NCR has crippled the transportation of BPO staff as there is paucity of cabs.
Sibal said the order has crippled their business and he requested the court to allow cabs that ferry BPO employees to be exempted from the ban order.
“Our global business will suffer. Lift the ban temporarily and give us some time. Otherwise, the whole business will go outside the country,” he said adding the sector employees of 2,50,000 people in NCR are ferried mostly by diesel cabs.