"There will be a potential USD 1 billion loss to the business process management (BPM) sector if ban on diesel cabs continues for 2-3 weeks," Nasscom's senior vice president Sangeeta Gupta said here.
Nasscom also plans to move the Supreme Court in the next couple of days regarding the matter.
Nasscom representatives have already met the Delhi Police and various central ministries, including the Ministry of Information Technology, and discussed the issues facing the industry in the wake of ban on diesel cabs in Delhi-NCR, resulting in non-availability of reliable transport options.
In an end to the road for diesel taxis in Delhi and National Capital Region (NCR), the Supreme Court last week refused to extend the April 30 deadline fixed for their conversion into less-polluting CNG mode.
The ban on diesel taxis in Delh-NCR region has brought the BPM (formerly BPO) industry almost to a standstill.
The BPM industry in NCR provides direct and indirect employment to over 1 million people.
There are five hours of downtime in last two days because of the ban and about 35 cabs are impounded and 20 cabs already challaned, he said adding parking is becoming an issue as employees are coming on their own vehicles.
"We need immediate relief as this involves the delivery of critical operations to clients outside India... We hope that the judiciary appreciates our predicament and resolves it by delaying the implementation," Keshav Murugesh, Group CEO of WNS and Chairman of the Nasscom BPM council said.
