The environment ministry is likely to soon issue
regulations that will mandate automakers to recycle a specified percentage of steel
from old vehicles, starting from the next financial year, according to people familiar with the matter.
“We recently held a
meeting with members of the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (Siam).
"The final
regulations are likely to be issued in the next 10 days,” a government source
informed. The move, according to government officials, is a
step toward “formalising” vehicle scrapping in the country and make automakers
“active stakeholders” in the broader policy against air pollution.
India currently has
just 70 registered vehicle scrapping facilities (RVSFs), as listed on Siam’s
website.
With the impending
regulations set to take effect in less than seven months, automakers will be
pushed to make substantial investments, either by establishing their own RVSFs
or partnering with third-party operators, the sources indicated.
The Ministry of
Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) had earlier issued a draft
notification on January 30 under the Environment (Protection) Rules, 1986,
outlining “extended producer responsibility (EPR) for end-of-life vehicles”.
Sources revealed that a Siam delegation, including representatives from Hero
MotoCorp, Mahindra & Mahindra, Maruti Suzuki India, Ashok Leyland, JSW MG
Motor, and TVS Motor, recently met with the environment ministry officials.
Following discussions,
the ministry agreed to provide some flexibility regarding the steel recycling
mandate in the draft notification. The
draft notification stated that in 2025-26, automakers must recycle or recover
at least 10 per cent of the steel used in vehicles placed on the market in
2005-06.
Similarly, in FY27,
the 10 per cent mandate will be for vehicles sold in FY07 This model shall
apply to each financial year until FY30. In 2030-31, the requirement shall increase
to 20 per cent of vehicles placed on the market in 2010-11 -- a model that
shall apply for each finacial year until FY35 for vehicles sold 20 years ago.
From 2035-36, the mandate shall rise to 30 per cent of automobiles completing
20 years on road.
These targets may be revised, with the first
category potentially reduced from 10 per cent to 8 per cent, the second from 20
per cent to 13 per cent, and the third from 30 per cent to 18 per cent, the
sources said.
If companies fail to meet the EPR targets, provide
false information, or do not recover steel as required, the Central Pollution
Control Board (CPCB) will be empowered to impose an “environmental compensation
(penalty)” on them.
The regulations will
require RVSFs to generate an EPR certificate for automakers based on the amount
of steel extracted from processing end-of-life vehicles. This data must be
uploaded to an online portal and verified by the CPCB or another authorised
agency. These upcoming regulations specifically address steel recycling and do
not cover other vehicle components like batteries, tyres, and used oil, which
have separate disposal and recovery regulations. The move, according to
government officials, is a step toward “formalising” vehicle scrapping in the
country and make automakers “active stakeholders” in the broader policy against
air pollution. India currently has just 70 registered vehicle scrapping
facilities (RVSFs), as listed on Siam’s website.