Union Minister Nitin Gadkari recently said in New Delhi that highway agencies should not charge tolls if roads are not in good condition.
The Road Minister spoke during the global workshop on satellite-based tolling organised by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI).
Media reports say that satellite-based tolling is set to be implemented over 5,000 km this financial year.
Gadkari explained why providing good quality roads before tolling is crucial.
"If you don't provide good quality service, you should not charge toll...We are in a hurry to start tolling to collect user fees and protect our interest," the road transport and highways minister said. "You should collect the user fee where you provide the best quality road.
If you collect tolls on roads with potholes, and mud, then there will be a backlash from people," he added.
The NHAI plans to implement a GNSS-based Electronic Toll Collection (ETC) system within the existing FASTag ecosystem, initially using a hybrid model with RFID-based ETC and GNSS-based ETC operating simultaneously.
NHAI wants to implement this on commercial vehicles before extending it to private vehicles, considering scalability and privacy concerns.
The authority suggests analysing driver behaviour and using back-end data analysis for fraud detection. It also suggests that GNSS could allow for a shift from prepaid to postpaid payment modes and enable faster credits based on travel plans.
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