India drops small car sops in new fuel emission rules


India Drops Small Car Concession in New Fuel Emission Rules (CAFE-III)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Phase Period CO₂ Target Key Feature
CAFE-I 2017–18 onward 130 g CO₂/km Baseline fleet-average norm
CAFE-II April 2022 onward 113 g CO₂/km Tightened targets
CAFE-III (draft) April 2027–March 2032 91.7 g CO₂/km EV/hybrid credits, steeper pathway

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Scientific / Technological

Governance / Ethical

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. CAFE norms are administered by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) under the Ministry of Powernot MoEFCC or MoRTH.
  2. The enabling statute is the Energy Conservation Act, 2001, amended in 2022.
  3. CAFE-III target: 91.7 g CO₂/km (fleet average); applicable from April 1, 2027.
  4. CAFE norms apply to M1 category passenger vehicles weighing less than 3,500 kg.
  5. CAFE-I (2017–18): 130 g CO₂/km; CAFE-II (April 2022): 113 g CO₂/km; CAFE-III (2027): 91.7 g CO₂/km.
  6. The September 2025 draft proposed leniency for cars weighing ≤909 kg (petrol) — a threshold aligning with Maruti Suzuki's small-car portfolio.
  7. Maruti Suzuki controls approximately 95% of India's ≤909 kg petrol small-car market.
  8. Transport accounts for ~12% of India's energy use; passenger vehicles ~90% of transport-related emissions.
  9. Non-compliance penalty under CAFE-III: up to ~US $550 (≈₹46,000) per vehicle.
  10. Companies may pool fuel-consumption performance with each other under revised CAFE-III draft.
  11. EV/hybrid credit multipliers were revised downward: strong hybrid 2.0 → 1.6; flex-fuel 1.5 → 1.1.
  12. The revised CAFE-III draft introduces a "substantially steeper reduction pathway" and curbs over-compensation for vehicle weight.
  13. The CAFE-III revision is a subordinate legislation process — it does not require Parliamentary approval.
  14. Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) was established under the Energy Conservation Act, 2001 (not 2022 — the 2022 amendment expanded its scope).

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III (Environment & Ecology; Indian Economy — Infrastructure: Energy; Science & Technology)

Specific syllabus headings: - Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment - Infrastructure: Energy - Awareness in the field of IT, Space, Computers, Robotics, Nanotechnology, Bio-technology and issues relating to intellectual property rights

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "India's CAFE-III norms represent a significant step towards decarbonising the transport sector, but their finalization has been caught in competing industry interests. Critically examine the regulatory challenges and the governance implications." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "Analyse how Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE) norms balance India's twin objectives of reducing petroleum import dependence and achieving its Nationally Determined Contributions under the Paris Agreement." (GS-III, 10 marks) 3. "The scrapping of the small-car exemption in India's draft CAFE-III rules highlights the tension between industrial policy and competitive neutrality. Discuss with reference to the role of Bureau of Energy Efficiency." (GS-II/GS-III combined, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
BS (Bharat Stage) Emission Standards Parallel vehicle emission regime under MoEFCC/MoRTH; CAFE regulates CO₂/fuel economy while BS norms regulate tailpipe pollutants (NOx, PM)
National Electric Mobility Mission Plan (NEMMP) / FAME Scheme Demand-side EV incentive programme that complements CAFE's supply-side pressure on automakers
Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) & Star Labelling BEE also runs appliance/building energy norms; understanding its mandate helps avoid confusion on the implementing body
India's Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) 2022 CAFE-III directly operationalises India's NDC emission-intensity reduction target (-45% by 2030)
Energy Conservation Act, 2001 & 2022 Amendment The 2022 amendment introduced carbon markets, green hydrogen mandates, and EV-related provisions — all tested in Prelims
Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme for Auto & Advanced Chemistry Cells Supply-side industrial policy push for EV manufacturing that interacts with CAFE compliance strategy
Paris Agreement & UNFCCC NDC framework International legal framework within which CAFE-III goals are nested

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry: CAFE norms are under the Ministry of Power (BEE), NOT the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) or MoEFCC. BS emission norms are MoRTH territory — do not conflate.
  2. CAFE vs. BS Norms confusion: CAFE = CO₂/fuel efficiency (fleet average, Ministry of Power); BS norms = tailpipe pollutants (NOx, HC, PM — individual vehicle, MoRTH). Two separate regimes.
  3. Wrong target year: CAFE-III begins April 1, 2027, not 2025 or 2026. The drafts are being circulated in 2025–26; implementation is FY 2027–32.
  4. Misidentifying the "winner" of the Sept 2025 draft: The small-car exemption in the September 2025 draft favoured Maruti Suzuki (not Tata/Mahindra); Tata and Mahindra opposed it and won its removal.
  5. Energy Conservation Act year: The Act was enacted in 2001; the important amendment expanding BEE's scope (carbon markets, EVs) was in 2022 — questions often test which year a specific provision was added.

11. Sources


Note: All facts labelled [Article] are drawn directly from the Reuters/The Hindu article (S4) provided as the primary source for this note.