Low Utilization of National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) Funds by Delhi

Context:
Delhi has utilized only 14% of the ₹99.77 crore allocated under the National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) since 2019, raising concerns over the effectiveness of air pollution mitigation efforts in the national capital.

Key Highlights:

Government Initiative – National Clean Air Programme (NCAP)
NCAP, launched in January 2019 by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), aims to reduce particulate pollution (PM10 and PM2.5) levels in 131 non-attainment cities.
• Target: 20–30% reduction in particulate matter by 2024, later revised to up to 40% reduction by 2025-26 (with 2017 as the base year).
• Cities prepare city-specific action plans including traffic management, dust control, waste management, and industrial emission regulation.

Utilisation of Funds
• Delhi has spent only ₹14.1 crore (14%) of ₹99.77 crore allocated since 2019.
• In contrast, nearby NCR cities such as Ghaziabad and Meerut have utilized over 80% of their allocated funds.
• Low spending indicates administrative bottlenecks and implementation gaps in pollution mitigation.

Budgetary Allocation and Scheme Linkages
• The Union Budget 2026-27 allocated ₹1,091 crore under the “Control of Pollution” scheme of MoEFCC.
NCAP functions as a sub-component of this scheme.
Parliamentary Committee concerns:
• Only ₹7.22 crore spent (till January 31, 2025) against Revised Estimate of ₹858 crore for 2024-25, indicating major utilization issues.

Institutional and Stakeholder Framework
Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) coordinates air pollution management across the Delhi-NCR region.
Budget allocation: ₹35.26 crore for 2026-27.
Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) manages Environment Protection Charge (EPC) funds collected from diesel vehicles.

Funding Streams for Pollution Control
NCAP funds for city action plans.
Finance Commission grants to million-plus cities for air quality improvement.
Environment Protection Charge (EPC) imposed on diesel vehicles entering Delhi-NCR.

Significance / Concerns
• Delhi consistently records extremely high PM2.5 and PM10 levels, especially in winter.
Under-utilization of funds weakens policy impact, delaying implementation of pollution control measures.
• Indicates institutional coordination problems among multiple agencies.

Relevant Prelims Points:
National Clean Air Programme (NCAP)
• Launched: 2019
• Implemented by: MoEFCC
• Coverage: 131 non-attainment cities (cities not meeting National Ambient Air Quality Standards).
• Target: Up to 40% reduction in PM levels by 2025-26.
• Base Year: 2017.
• Focus pollutants: PM10 and PM2.5.

  • Particulate Matter (PM)
    PM10: Particles with diameter ≤10 micrometers.
    PM2.5: Particles with diameter ≤2.5 micrometers; more dangerous as they penetrate deep into lungs.
  • Environment Protection Charge (EPC)
    • Levy on diesel vehicles entering Delhi-NCR.
    • Introduced based on Supreme Court directions.
    • Funds managed by Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB).
  • Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM)
    • Statutory body created through Commission for Air Quality Management in NCR and Adjoining Areas Act, 2021.
    • Coordinates actions among central government, state governments, and pollution control boards.

Relevant Mains Points:

Issue: Inefficient Utilisation of Environmental Funds
• Highlights implementation deficits in urban environmental governance.
• Reflects capacity constraints of urban local bodies and state agencies.
• Weak fund utilisation undermines evidence-based air pollution mitigation strategies.

Structural Challenges in Air Pollution Governance
Fragmented institutional framework (multiple agencies such as CPCB, DPCC, CAQM, municipal bodies).
Limited monitoring infrastructure for emissions and air quality.
Slow project approvals and bureaucratic delays.
Urban planning failures such as poor public transport integration and construction dust.

Implications for Environmental Policy
• Reduces effectiveness of flagship programmes like NCAP.
• Weakens India’s commitment to sustainable urban development and SDG-11 (Sustainable Cities).
• Impacts public health, as air pollution contributes to respiratory diseases and premature deaths.

Way Forward
Strengthen accountability mechanisms for fund utilization through performance audits.
• Improve coordination between central, state, and local agencies under CAQM.
• Enhance capacity of urban local bodies to implement pollution control projects.
• Integrate technology-based monitoring systems for real-time air quality management.
• Promote public transport, electric mobility, and dust control measures to reduce emissions.

UPSC Relevance:
Prelims: National Clean Air Programme (NCAP), CAQM, Environment Protection Charge, particulate matter pollution.
Mains: GS Paper III – Environmental Pollution, Government Policies and Interventions for Environmental Protection, Urban Environmental Governance.

« Prev April 2026 Next »
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930