Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
India

Delhi High Court Suggests Limiting Odd-even Plan To A Week

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2016 12:14 PM
    The Delhi High Court on Wednesday asked the city government whether it can limit the 15-day odd-even number car regulation scheme to a week, saying it has caused inconvenience to people.
     
    The government said it was earlier decided that the scheme, which has received overwhelming response since its beginning on January 1, will be tried for 15 days to evaluate its impact.
     
    It said vehicular pollution has indeed come down due to success of the scheme, the facts of which the government would put before the court on January 8.
     
    "Is it really necessary to have it for two weeks (15 days)? Can't it be confined to eight days? Can you end it on Friday? People are facing inconvenience. Take instructions," said a division bench of Chief Justice G. Rohini and Justice Jayant Nath to the government.
     
    The bench asked the government to submit the data on air pollution it has collected in a week during implementation of the odd-even scheme.
     
    "It was a pilot project. You must have data (on air pollution) with you now. Show us how much the pollution has reduced. The people of Delhi supported you despite inconvenience. There is no adequate public transport," it added.
     
    In December, after the high court called Delhi a "gas chamber", the Aam Aadmi Party government decided to implement the scheme which allows odd- and even-numbered cars to ply on alternate dates. 
     
    Talking to reporters later, Delhi Transport Minister Gopal Rai said there was 30-35 percent reduction in the vehicular emissions in the first five days of the scheme.
     
    He said the government decided to run the scheme for 15 days because it wanted "to have sufficient data and experience".
     
     
    Green activists expressed dismay over the questioning by the court.
     
    "The government must not be stopped from doing this," Anumita Roychowdhury, executive director at Centre for Science and Environment, told IANS.
     
    "In a time when your (pollution) levels are hitting levels like 300-400, the solution cannot work like a magic bullet that it comes down to 60," she added.
     
    "But what these measures are going to help you to do is bring down the steep levels and lower levels of the toxicity of the pollution," she said.
     
    "What inconvenience? These are the best days in so many years in Delhi. We are saving time, saving fuel. We are not stuck in traffic jams," she added.
     
    The court, while hearing 12 PILs challenging the Delhi government's decision on the odd-even scheme, also asked why diesel cabs were still plying on roads despite a ban.
     
    Advocate Rahul Mehra, appearing for the Delhi government, defended the decision of continuing with the odd-even scheme for 15 days, saying the data collected till now shows decrease in pollution levels.
     
    Meanwhile, in a status report submitted to the court, the government defended its decision to exempt two-wheelers from the scheme.
     
    "In case of two-wheelers, pooling would have been a limited option and it was expected that around 60-70 percent of population would have to resort to public transport. The present available public transport infrastructure is not sufficient to cater to such a huge demand," it said.
     
     
    The status report said the reduction in the number of four-wheelers helps decrease the congestion on roads "which has a positive effect on vehicular pollution control".

    MORE India ARTICLES

    At Bathinda Rally Sukhbir Badal Dares Cong To Match Shiromani Akali Dal's Show Of Strength

    At Bathinda Rally Sukhbir Badal Dares Cong To Match Shiromani Akali Dal's Show Of Strength
    The 'Sadbhavna Rally' organised by the Akali Dal, with alliance partner BJP leaders also attending, was an attempt by the party to re-assert itself politically after nearly two months of turmoil in Punjab

    At Bathinda Rally Sukhbir Badal Dares Cong To Match Shiromani Akali Dal's Show Of Strength

    Panjab University Appoints Noted Filmmaker-Lyricist Gulzar To Tagore Chair

    Panjab University Appoints Noted Filmmaker-Lyricist Gulzar To Tagore Chair
    Noted filmmaker-lyricist Gulzar has been appointed as 'Tagore Professor of Indian Literature' at Panjab University here.

    Panjab University Appoints Noted Filmmaker-Lyricist Gulzar To Tagore Chair

    At Punjab Expo 'Reverse Buyer-Seller Meet' To Push Sub-Continental Trade

    At Punjab Expo 'Reverse Buyer-Seller Meet' To Push Sub-Continental Trade
    Nearly 200 buyers from SAARC nations will converge in Amritsar, 250 km from here, for the RBSM, where Indian manufacturers and traders are expecting trade linkages.

    At Punjab Expo 'Reverse Buyer-Seller Meet' To Push Sub-Continental Trade

    Sukhbir Badal Says Rahul Encouraging Khalistani Forces, Congress Hits Back

    Sukhbir Badal Says Rahul Encouraging Khalistani Forces, Congress Hits Back
    "What is the connection of Rahul Gandhi and Amarinder Singh with Sarbat Khalsa?" he asked.

    Sukhbir Badal Says Rahul Encouraging Khalistani Forces, Congress Hits Back

    Rahul Dares Modi To Jail Him; Sonia, Manmohan Attack Government

    Rahul Dares Modi To Jail Him; Sonia, Manmohan Attack Government
    Hitting out at allegations over his nationality, Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi on Thursday dared Prime Minister Narendra Modi to arrest him if he has done any wrong, and accused him of using cronies to throw "muck" at him and his family.

    Rahul Dares Modi To Jail Him; Sonia, Manmohan Attack Government

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal, Man Behind Babri Razing, Is Dead

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal, Man Behind Babri Razing, Is Dead
    VHP leader Ashok Singhal, who was one of the key architects of the mass campaign that led to the razing of the Babri mosque in 1992, died here on Tuesday. He was 89.

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal, Man Behind Babri Razing, Is Dead