The department has asked traffic police to deploy four teams in every
municipal zone in coordination with its enforcement wing to impound diesel and
petrol-run vehicles that are 10 and 15 years old, respectively.
Similar action has also been launched against
unregistered and unfit e-rickshaws across the city. Total 213 vehicles,
including two-wheelers, cars, and e-rickshwas were impounded on Friday,
officials said.
This is the second round of city-wide crackdown on overage
vehicles. In March last year, the department launched a drive to impound such
vehicles. The drive continued for a few months.
According to the latest figure, more than 55
lakh overage vehicles have been de-registered so far in the national capital. An official said that several teams of Delhi
Traffic Police, Enforcement Wing of the Transport Department, MCD and other
agencies will take action. The official said the "end of life" vehicles will be
impounded and directly sent to the scrapping yard if they are found plying on
city roads or parked in public places.
According to the Transport Department's recent public notice,
owners of overage vehicles have three options -- keep such vehicles in a
private parking space owned by the individual, not in a shared parking space,
obtain a No Objection Certificate (NOC) to move the vehicle out of Delhi within
one year of the vehicle's expiry date, or scrap the vehicle through a
registered agency.
As the winter season approaches, when
pollution levels typically spike, the drive is also part of a broader strategy
to improve air quality and streamline vehicle registration across the capital, an official of
the Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC) said.