A vehicle importer brings 2,000 electric three-wheelers into India and starts selling them under the imported brand name. The sales team sees it as a normal import and distribution activity. However, during a compliance review, the company discovers that every vehicle introduced into the Indian market may create an End-of-Life Vehicle EPR obligation under the Environment Protection (End-of-Life Vehicles) Rules, 2025.
This is where many manufacturers and importers face problems. They assume that vehicle scrapping compliance becomes relevant only after vehicles become old. In reality, the EPR framework begins much earlier. A producer must register on the CPCB ELV portal, declare vehicle sales data, calculate steel-based EPR targets and fulfil obligations by purchasing EPR certificates from Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facilities.
The Environment Protection (End-of-Life Vehicles) Rules, 2025 were notified on 06 January 2025 and became effective from 01 April 2025. From FY 2025-26, producers of transport and non-transport vehicles must follow a structured EPR compliance system. The rules are especially important for vehicle manufacturers, assemblers, importers, brand owners and companies selling vehicles under their own brand.

End-of-Life Vehicle EPR Registration is not just a one-time certificate. It is a recurring compliance framework involving registration, annual declaration, EPR target fulfilment, certificate purchase, record keeping and return filing. If handled incorrectly, it can lead to CPCB queries, environmental compensation, registration suspension and compliance risk under the Environment Protection Act, 1986.
Key compliance numbers:
End-of-Life Vehicle EPR Registration is the mandatory registration required for vehicle producers under the Environment Protection (End-of-Life Vehicles) Rules, 2025. The registration is done through the centralized CPCB ELV portal and applies to producers who introduce vehicles into the Indian domestic market.
The term EPR means Extended Producer Responsibility. Under the ELV framework, it means the responsibility of a producer for environmentally sound scrapping of End-of-Life Vehicles. This responsibility is fulfilled through EPR certificates generated by Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facilities.
The obligation is calculated based on the steel used in vehicles introduced into the market. For example, if a producer introduced 10,000 vehicles in the applicable base year and the total steel used in those vehicles was 8,000 metric tonnes, the producer’s EPR obligation for the 8 percent phase may be calculated on that steel quantity.
This system is designed to move vehicle scrapping from informal dismantling yards to authorized and environmentally sound facilities. It also creates a formal certificate market where RVSFs generate EPR certificates and producers purchase those certificates to fulfil their obligations.
Important points:
ELV EPR compliance matters because vehicle scrapping involves multiple environmental risks. Old vehicles contain steel, aluminium, plastic, rubber, fluids, batteries, oils, tyres, glass, electronic parts and hazardous components. If these materials are dismantled in informal yards, they can create soil, water and air pollution.
For producers, the compliance risk is both regulatory and operational. A company that does not register on the CPCB ELV portal may face issues during audits, ESG disclosures, import documentation, investor due diligence and business expansion. For automobile brands, non-compliance may also affect reputation and supply chain credibility.
The ELV framework is also linked to circular economy goals. India’s vehicle sector generates a large volume of recoverable steel. Recycling one tonne of steel can save approximately 1,134 kg of iron ore, 635 kg of coal and 54.4 kg of limestone. This makes ELV recycling an important resource recovery mechanism, not only a regulatory requirement.
The producer must therefore treat End-of-Life Vehicle EPR Registration as part of long-term compliance planning. It requires coordination between legal, finance, production, import, sales, technical and ESG teams.
Business risks include:
The ELV Rules apply to producers, registered vehicle owners, bulk consumers, Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facilities, collection centers, automated testing stations and entities involved in testing, handling, processing and scrapping of End-of-Life Vehicles.
For producers, the rules apply to entities engaged in manufacturing or assembling and selling vehicles under their own brand. They also apply to entities selling vehicles under their own brand even when the vehicles are manufactured by another manufacturer or supplier. Importers of vehicles are also covered.
The rules cover transport vehicles and non-transport vehicles. They also include electric vehicles, battery-operated vehicles, e-rickshaws and e-carts. However, agricultural tractors, agricultural trailers, combine harvesters and power tillers are excluded from ELV EPR targets.
Bulk consumers also have obligations. A bulk consumer means an entity having ownership of more than 100 vehicles. This includes State Transport Undertakings. Such entities must ensure proper handling of End-of-Life Vehicles and may have registration and return filing duties.
Covered entities include:
Producer classification is one of the most important steps in the End-of-Life Vehicle EPR Registration process. The CPCB ELV portal classifies producers into 8 categories based on how vehicles are manufactured, imported, branded or sold.
A wrong producer category can result in incorrect EPR target mapping. It can also create problems where sales data, import records, brand ownership and GST details do not match the selected category. For example, an importer selling vehicles under an imported brand should not classify itself as a domestic manufacturer.
The classification also matters in co-branding and contract manufacturing cases. If one company manufactures vehicles and another company sells them under its brand, both parties must carefully understand who carries the EPR obligation and how vehicle data must be accepted or adjusted on the portal.
For importers, IEC details become important. For manufacturers, facility details and production data become important. For brand owners, procurement and sales records must be aligned with the brand under which vehicles are sold.
| Code | Producer Type | Practical Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| P1 | Manufacture or assembly and sale under own brand | OEM manufactures and sells vehicles |
| P2 | Sale under own brand, manufactured by another manufacturer | Brand owner sells vehicles made by another unit |
| P3 | Manufacture or assembly and sale to another producer | Contract manufacturer supplies to producer |
| P4 | Manufacture or assembly and sale in open market with another producer brand | Manufacturing under another brand |
| P5 | Import and sale under own brand | Importer sells under its own brand |
| P6 | Import and sale under imported brand | Importer sells under foreign brand |
| P7 | Import and sale to another producer | Importer supplies to another producer |
| P8 | Import for self-use | Entity imports vehicles for internal use |
Common filing issues:
| Regulation | Requirement | Deadline | Applicable To | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Environment Protection (End-of-Life Vehicles) Rules, 2025 | ELV EPR registration and compliance | Effective from 01 April 2025 | Producers, RVSFs, bulk consumers | Registration cancellation and environmental compensation |
| Rule 4 | Producer responsibility and EPR fulfilment | Annual compliance cycle | Vehicle producers | EPR target shortfall |
| Rule 8 | RVSF responsibility for scrapping and reporting | Quarterly reporting cycle | Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facilities | Certificate rejection or SPCB action |
| Rule 9 | EPR certificate generation | Through CPCB portal | RVSFs and producers | Invalid certificate transaction |
| Rule 10 | Registration of entities | Before regulated activity | Producers, RVSFs, bulk consumers | Portal suspension |
| Annual Return | Submission of previous financial year data | By 30 June | Producers and bulk consumers | Non-compliance record |
| EPR Obligation Declaration | Current year obligation declaration | By 30 April | Producers | Target mismatch |
This table shows that ELV EPR is not limited to producer registration. It includes a full compliance chain involving CPCB, SPCBs, producers, RVSFs and bulk consumers. Each stakeholder has a separate role and separate reporting responsibility.
CPCB manages producer registration and the centralized portal. SPCBs and PCCs regulate RVSFs and bulk consumers. RVSFs process End-of-Life Vehicles and generate certificates. Producers purchase certificates and use them to meet their EPR obligations.
The annual return deadline of 30 June is especially important. Producers must submit details for the previous financial year, including vehicles introduced into the market and the status of EPR obligation fulfilment. The current year EPR obligation must be declared by 30 April.
The ELV EPR target is based on the weight of steel used in vehicles introduced into the market by the producer. The target increases in three stages: 8 percent, 13 percent and 18 percent.
For transport vehicles, the EPR base starts from vehicles introduced 15 years earlier. For non-transport vehicles, the base starts from vehicles introduced 20 years earlier. This difference is important because commercial vehicles and private vehicles have different usage and lifecycle assumptions.
For example, for FY 2025-26, the target for transport vehicles is linked to vehicles introduced from FY 2010-11 to FY 2014-15. For non-transport vehicles, the target is linked to vehicles introduced from FY 2005-06 to FY 2009-10.
A producer may carry forward up to 30 percent of the EPR target of any year to the subsequent 4 years. However, carry forward should not be used as a routine compliance strategy because it can create accumulated liability and certificate availability risk.
| Financial Year | EPR Target | Applicable Base Years |
|---|---|---|
| FY 2025-26 to FY 2029-30 | Minimum 8 percent of steel used | FY 2010-11 to FY 2014-15 |
| FY 2030-31 to FY 2034-35 | Minimum 13 percent of steel used | FY 2015-16 to FY 2019-20 |
| FY 2035-36 onward | Minimum 18 percent of steel used | FY 2020-21 onward |
| Financial Year | EPR Target | Applicable Base Years |
|---|---|---|
| FY 2025-26 to FY 2029-30 | Minimum 8 percent of steel used | FY 2005-06 to FY 2009-10 |
| FY 2030-31 to FY 2034-35 | Minimum 13 percent of steel used | FY 2010-11 to FY 2014-15 |
| FY 2035-36 onward | Minimum 18 percent of steel used | FY 2015-16 onward |
Key calculation points:
Assume a producer introduced 5,000 transport vehicles in the applicable base year. If the average steel used per vehicle was 800 kg, the total steel placed in the market would be 4,000,000 kg or 4,000 metric tonnes.
For FY 2025-26, the EPR target is 8 percent. Therefore, the producer’s obligation would be 320 metric tonnes of steel equivalent through EPR certificates. This means the producer must purchase EPR certificates representing 320 metric tonnes of steel scrap from registered RVSFs.
If the same producer has a 13 percent target in the later phase, the obligation on 4,000 metric tonnes of steel would become 520 metric tonnes. At 18 percent, the obligation would become 720 metric tonnes. This shows why accurate steel data is financially important.
A small error in steel weight can create a large compliance difference. If the steel weight is underreported by 10 percent, the producer may face target revision, portal scrutiny and environmental compensation exposure.
Illustration:
| Particular | Value |
|---|---|
| Vehicles introduced | 5,000 vehicles |
| Average steel per vehicle | 800 kg |
| Total steel used | 4,000,000 kg |
| Total steel in metric tonnes | 4,000 MT |
| EPR target at 8 percent | 320 MT |
| EPR target at 13 percent | 520 MT |
| EPR target at 18 percent | 720 MT |
The registration process begins on the CPCB ELV portal. The producer must sign up as a producer, generate login credentials and complete the online registration form. The form is divided into 5 parts: General Details, Manufacturing and Assembly Details, Procurement and Sales Data, Annual Turnover and Declaration, and Payment of Fee.
The General Details section includes GST, PAN, CIN, TIN, company email, registered address and authorized person details. For importers, IEC must be uploaded. The portal auto-fetches some company details from GST, but the producer must ensure that supporting documents match the registered business information.
The Manufacturing and Assembly section applies to producers with manufacturing or assembly facilities. The producer must provide vehicle type, manufacturing site, vehicle category and relevant facility data. For importers or brand owners, procurement and sales data becomes more important.
The Procurement and Sales Data section is the most sensitive part. The producer must enter year-wise vehicle data, number of vehicles, vehicle type, vehicle weight, steel weight, open market sales, sales to another producer, co-branded sales, self-use and exports. Exports are not counted for EPR target calculation, but they must be reported correctly.
Step-by-step process:
Documents must be prepared before starting the registration. Many application delays happen because the GST address, PAN details, IEC certificate, company name or authorized person details do not match.
The producer must also maintain technical records for steel weight. Since EPR targets are based on steel used in vehicles, model-wise steel data should be supported by technical sheets, bill of material, procurement records, production records or CA certification.
For importers, IEC is mandatory. For companies registered with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, CIN is relevant. If the business has TIN, it should be provided. Proprietorship businesses may need to provide authorized person PAN where company PAN is not applicable.
The CA certificate is one of the most important documents. It should support annual turnover, number of vehicles, category-wise sales and steel weight data. Incorrect CA certification can lead to target mismatch and CPCB query.
Required documents include:
Producer registration fee depends on average annual turnover. This makes the fee structure different from many other environmental registrations where a flat fee is charged.
A producer with annual turnover up to Rs. 10 crore falls in the lowest fee slab. A large automobile company with turnover above Rs. 1000 crore falls in the highest fee slab. This fee must be paid through the portal.
The annual processing fee is 50 percent of the application fee at the time of return filing. Therefore, businesses should budget not only for first-time registration but also for annual compliance costs.
Incorrect turnover declaration can create problems. If the turnover declared in the application does not match audited financials or CA certification, the application may be questioned by CPCB.
| Average Annual Turnover | Registration Fee |
|---|---|
| Up to Rs. 10 crore | Rs. 25,000 |
| More than Rs. 10 crore to Rs. 50 crore | Rs. 50,000 |
| More than Rs. 50 crore to Rs. 250 crore | Rs. 2,00,000 |
| More than Rs. 250 crore to Rs. 1000 crore | Rs. 5,00,000 |
| More than Rs. 1000 crore | Rs. 10,00,000 |
Important fee points:
As per the producer registration SOP, CPCB may process the producer application within 15 working days after submission. If the application is complete and correct, registration can be granted through the portal.
If the application is incomplete, CPCB may raise a query or reject the application. The producer must monitor the portal regularly because all communication happens digitally. Missing a portal query can delay approval.
If the producer submits false, irrelevant or misleading information, the application may be rejected. In such cases, the registration fee may be forfeited and the producer may need to submit a fresh application with fresh fee.
This is why internal data validation before submission is critical. Producer category, vehicle data, steel weight, turnover, CA certificate, IEC and GST details should be checked before final submission.
Timeline points:
| Step | Authority | Timeline | Main Documents | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Producer registration | CPCB | Before compliance operation | GST, PAN, CIN, IEC, CA certificate | Registration delay |
| Current year EPR declaration | CPCB | By 30 April | Vehicle and steel data | Incorrect obligation |
| Certificate purchase | CPCB portal | During compliance year | EPR certificate from RVSF | Target shortfall |
| Annual return filing | CPCB | By 30 June | Form 1, sales data, certificate data | Non-compliance record |
| Record maintenance | Producer | Continuous | Invoices, CA certificate, vehicle records | Audit risk |
| RVSF certificate generation | RVSF and SPCB | Quarterly cycle | Steel scrap data | Certificate shortage |
This compliance timeline shows that ELV EPR is a recurring cycle. A producer must first register, then declare current year obligation, purchase certificates and file annual returns. Missing any one step can affect the entire compliance position.
The 30 April deadline is important for current year obligation declaration. The 30 June deadline is important for annual return filing for the previous financial year. These dates should be added to the company’s compliance calendar.
RVSF certificate availability is another practical concern. Producers should not wait until the end of the financial year to purchase certificates. Early planning helps avoid last-minute shortages and pricing pressure.
Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facilities are central to the ELV EPR framework. They receive End-of-Life Vehicles, carry out depollution, dismantling, segregation, recycling and environmentally sound disposal of waste materials.
RVSFs generate EPR certificates based on steel scrap recovered from End-of-Life Vehicles or other automobile sector steel scrap. These certificates are then purchased by producers to fulfil their EPR obligations.
A certificate is generated in kilograms and is equal to the weight of steel scrap generated. If an RVSF generates 100,000 kg of eligible steel scrap, it may generate certificates equivalent to 100,000 kg, subject to portal validation and rule conditions.
The RVSF must also maintain records of vehicles received, processed materials, hazardous waste, non-recyclable residues and downstream disposal. Any false data or false certificate generation can lead to action against the RVSF.
RVSF responsibilities include:
The EPR certificate mechanism converts recovered steel scrap into compliance credit. A producer does not directly claim compliance by scrapping vehicles on its own unless the activity is routed through registered systems and valid certificates.
The formula is straightforward. EPR certificate in kg equals the weight of steel scrap generated in kg by a Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facility. The certificate is valid for 5 years from the end of the financial year in which it was generated.
A producer can purchase certificates only up to its current year obligation plus leftover obligation from previous years. Once purchased, the certificate is automatically adjusted against the producer’s EPR obligation. A used certificate cannot be transferred again.
This creates a traceable compliance chain. The RVSF must generate valid certificates, the producer must purchase valid certificates and the portal must reflect the adjustment against EPR liability.
Certificate rules:
Non-compliance under the ELV Rules can create serious business and regulatory consequences. Since the rules are issued under the Environment Protection Act, 1986, violations can attract environmental compensation and penal action.
The most common risk is incorrect registration. This may happen when the producer selects the wrong category, uploads mismatched documents, reports wrong steel weight or fails to disclose vehicle data accurately. Even if registration is granted, incorrect data can become a problem during audit.
Another risk is non-fulfilment of EPR obligation. If the producer does not purchase sufficient certificates, the shortfall may lead to environmental compensation. Carry forward may be available up to 30 percent in specified cases, but it should not be treated as a substitute for compliance.
False certificates are a serious risk. If an RVSF generates false certificates or a producer uses certificates without proper basis, both parties may face action. The producer must ensure that certificates are purchased only through the official CPCB portal.
Compliance risks include:
An importer brings 1,500 vehicles into India and sells them under an imported brand. The company starts registration but does not upload IEC and selects the wrong producer category. CPCB raises a query, and the registration gets delayed.
This delay can affect future compliance planning because the producer cannot properly declare EPR obligations without completing registration. The company may also face issues during internal audit and buyer due diligence.
Correct approach: select the correct importer category, upload IEC, match GST and PAN records and prepare imported vehicle data before filing.
A vehicle manufacturer reports total vehicle weight but does not maintain model-wise steel weight. The company uses broad estimates instead of technical data. Later, the EPR target appears inconsistent with production records.
This can lead to target revision and environmental compensation exposure. Since the target is calculated on steel used, the producer must maintain reliable steel weight data.
Correct approach: prepare model-wise steel weight sheets, link them with production records and get CA certification.
A producer has an obligation of 500 MT but waits until the last quarter to purchase EPR certificates. Available RVSF certificates are limited, and the producer fails to meet the full target on time.
This creates shortfall risk. Even if partial carry forward is allowed, the producer’s compliance record may still be affected.
Correct approach: track certificate availability quarterly and purchase certificates in a planned manner during the compliance year.
Green Permits supports vehicle manufacturers, importers, brand owners, OEM suppliers, fleet owners and recycling businesses with End-of-Life Vehicle EPR Registration and related environmental compliance.
The process requires more than portal filling. It requires producer category assessment, document review, sales data validation, steel weight mapping, fee calculation, certificate planning and annual compliance tracking.
For importers and manufacturers, Green Permits helps align ELV compliance with broader regulatory requirements such as EPR compliance, environmental approvals, CPCB portal filings, SPCB coordination and ESG documentation.
Green Permits can support with:
End-of-Life Vehicle EPR Registration is now a key compliance requirement for vehicle producers in India. The framework became effective from 01 April 2025 and applies to manufacturers, assemblers, importers and brand owners introducing vehicles into the domestic market.
The most important numerical elements are the 8 percent, 13 percent and 18 percent steel-based EPR targets. The producer must also track the 30 April obligation declaration deadline, the 30 June annual return deadline and the 15 working day CPCB processing timeline.
Early compliance is better than delayed correction. A producer that maintains clean vehicle data, correct steel weight, proper CA certification and timely certificate purchase can avoid portal delays, target mismatches and environmental compensation.
For businesses, the cost of compliance is much lower than the cost of rejection, penalty, certificate shortfall or market credibility loss. ELV EPR should be handled as a structured annual compliance system, not as a one-time registration task.
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