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Delhi Rolls Out 400 DEVI Electric Buses to Modernize Public Transport

The new fleet aims to enhance last-mile connectivity, reduce pollution, and transition Delhi's public transport to 100% electric by next year.

Newly launched electric buses at Kushak Nallah Depot in Sewa Nagar, New Delhi on Friday. (Sonu Mehta/HT Photo)
Delhi CM Rekha Gupta Launches 400 Electric Buses In Delhi, Free Travel For Women
Buses parked at the Kushak depot. (Arvind Yadav/HT Photo)

Overview

  • The Delhi government has launched 400 DEVI electric buses, with operations starting on 12-kilometre feeder routes from key depots including Kushak Nallah, Ghazipur, and East Vinod Nagar.
  • These nine-metre buses, supplemented by some 12-metre models, replace 700 end-of-life vehicles recently removed from the Delhi Transport Corporation fleet.
  • Each bus features 23 seats, six reserved for women, space for standing passengers, and advanced amenities like CCTV cameras, panic buttons, and a 200+ kilometre range per charge.
  • Chief Minister Rekha Gupta announced plans to add 2,080 more electric buses by December 2025 as part of the city's broader EV Policy 2.0, which includes infrastructure expansion and job creation.
  • The initiative has sparked political contention, with the BJP framing it as a central government gift, while the AAP accuses the current administration of repackaging its earlier Mohalla Bus scheme.