"The Supreme Court order banning sale of all BS-III vehicles from April 1 is an unexpected and unprecedented move that will have a material impact on the entire automotive industry, OEMs' and dealer networks and is a penalty to the entire automotive industry," Tata Motors said in a statement.
The largest commercial vehicles maker noted that the industry planned the current transition into BS-IV in line with the accepted practice of stopping production of earlier emission standard vehicles effective from the transition date and is also under the prevailing laws.
He also categorically said "there is no technology available to upgrade a BS-III vehicle into a BS-IV one."
On its passenger vehicles business, he said it has been producing BS-IV compliant vehicles across our entire product range and are fully BS-IV ready.
Without quantifying the losses or the volume of banned units, the company said it is assessing the impact of the order that are lying unsold on April 1, at both company and dealerships.
"We have been making BS-IV vehicles since 2010 and has sufficient capability and capacity to make these vehicles. However, since BS-IV commercial vehicles cannot run properly on BS-III fuel, and such fuel is not available nationwide, our customers continued to buy BS III vehicles," Dasari said.
BharatBenz from the German major Dialmer said the
order will have practically no impact on it as it hopes to finish the stock over the next couple of days.
Erich Nesselhauf, managing director and CEO, Daimler India Commercial Vehicles told
