Scrappage policy proposes 6-month fitness certification for vehicles older than 15 years

EVs to be exempted from registration fees.

29 Jul 2019 | 8199 Views | By Autocar Pro News Desk

The Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH) has recently issued a draft notification for amendments to the Central Motor Vehicles Rules, which aims to promote adoption of electric vehicles, ensure disabled-friendly features in buses, and provide an enabling mechanism for scrapping of vehicles older than 15 years.

The ministry has proposed that transport vehicles older than 15 years will need to renew certificate of fitness to be conducted every six months from the existing requirement of once a year. In addition, the charges have been increased further for conducting fitness test and grant and renewal of certificate of fitness for motor vehicles older than 15 years. To make buses disabled- and wheel chair-friendly, priority seats, signs, securing of crutches/ canes/ walkers, hand rail/ stanchions, controls at priority seats and wheel chair entry/ housing/ locking arrangement to be checked and ensured at the time of fitness inspection has been introduced.

The government aims to push adoption of electric vehicles and has exempted them from payment of fees for the purpose of issue or renewal of registration certificate and assignment of new registration mark.

New vehicles will be exempted from the registration certificate fees and assignment of new registration mark, if the vehicle is presented for the registration along with the 'Scrapping Certificate' of the previously owned vehicle of same category issued by the authorised scrapping centre/agency and the scrapping certificate has not been utilised for any other such cases in past. The fees have been revised for renewal of certificates of registration and assignment of new registration mark.

Also read: How end-of-life vehicle scrappage can drive progress

 

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