NHAI Rolls Out Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) Tolling at Gharaunda Toll Plaza on NH-44

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NHAI Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) Tolling — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Full Name Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) Tolling System
Implementing Agency National Highways Authority of India (NHAI)
Parent Ministry Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH)
Auxiliary Body Indian Highways Management Company Ltd (IHMCL) — manages FASTag ecosystem [S9]
Primary Technology High-performance RFID Readers + ANPR Cameras on overhead gantries
Payment Instrument FASTag (RFID-based Electronic Toll Collection)
Identifier Cross-check Vehicle Registration Number (VRN) read by ANPR camera
Penalty for Non-Payment E-Notice issued; normal fee payable within 72 hours; after 72 hours — 2× normal fee
E-Notice Portal nhfeenotice.parivahan.gov.in
India's 1st MLFF Site Chorayasi Toll Plaza, NH-48, Surat–Bharuch, Gujarat
Rajasthan's 1st MLFF Site Daulatpura Toll Plaza, NH-48, Delhi–Jaipur section
Haryana MLFF Site Gharaunda Toll Plaza, NH-44, Panipat–Jalandhar section
NH-44 Corridor One of India's longest NHs; connects Srinagar to Kanyakumari (formerly NH-1, NH-7, etc.)
FY Rollout Target ~25 National Highway fee plazas (current financial year)
Day-1 traffic (Gujarat) ~41,500 vehicles
Parallel Track GNSS/Satellite-based tolling (Global Navigation Satellite System)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Scientific / Technological

Environmental

Administrative / Governance

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks


8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: Primarily GS-III (Infrastructure; Science & Technology; Indian Economy) Syllabus Heading: Infrastructure: Roads, Ports, Railways, Airports; Science & Technology — developments and applications.

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) tolling represents a paradigm shift in India's highway infrastructure governance. Critically analyse its technological architecture, economic benefits, and implementation challenges." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "Discuss how India's transition from FASTag-based barrier tolling to Multi-Lane Free Flow systems aligns with the National Logistics Policy, 2022 objectives and India's climate commitments." (GS-III, 10 marks) 3. "Examine the role of digital enforcement mechanisms — such as E-Notice and Parivahan data integration — in curbing toll evasion on National Highways. What are the legal and administrative limitations?" (GS-II/GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
FASTag & ETC (Electronic Toll Collection) Payment backbone of MLFF; mandatory since Feb 2021
GNSS/Satellite-Based Tolling Next-generation alternative to gantry-based MLFF; distance-based charging under parallel development
National Logistics Policy, 2022 MLFF directly reduces logistics cost — a core NLP objective
Bharatmala Pariyojana NH development programme under which many MLFF-enabled highways are being built/upgraded
NHAI & NHDP (National Highway Development Programme) Institutional and programme context for highway expansion
PM GatiShakti National Master Plan Integrated multimodal infrastructure — MLFF is a last-mile efficiency measure within this framework
IHMCL & FASTag Ecosystem Manages FASTag issuance, certification, and annual pass products
Parivahan Sewa Portal (MoRTH) Vehicle registration data platform; backbone of VRN-based MLFF enforcement

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing implementing agency: MLFF is implemented by NHAI, not MoRTH directly. MoRTH is the parent ministry. IHMCL manages the FASTag ecosystem — a third distinct body.
  2. Wrong "first" location: India's first MLFF was in Gujarat (Chorayasi, NH-48) — NOT at Gharaunda (NH-44, Haryana), which is a later rollout. Rajasthan's first (Daulatpura, NH-48) is yet another separate milestone.
  3. MLFF vs GNSS tolling: MLFF uses overhead gantries + RFID + ANPR (location-based). GNSS/satellite tolling uses GPS tracking for distance-based charging — these are two distinct systems often confused as the same.
  4. Penalty timeline: Non-payment penalty kicks in after 72 hours of E-Notice, at 2× rate — not immediately, not 48 hours.
  5. NH-44 corridor confusion: NH-44 runs Srinagar–Kanyakumari; the Panipat–Jalandhar section is just one segment. Do not conflate the full corridor with the Gharaunda plaza's specific location in Haryana.

11. Sources