OneWorld South Asia Home ICTs for Development Indian drivers get smart with an e-license
OneWorld South Asia OneWorld Network OneWorld South Asia
24 May 2012
Welcome to OneWorld South Asia! We bring together a network of people and groups working on human rights and sustainable development.
 
OWSA Group Websites
Governance Knowledge Centre
EK duniya anEK awaaz
Climate Change Action
Appropriate Technology Choices
Digital Opportunity Channel
Lifelines
The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act
 
Collaborative Projects

Indian drivers get smart with an e-license

Bookmark 
and Share
07 July 2010
 

India crossed its first milestone of an ambitious plan by supplying 10 million drivers with an e- drivers license. The card is equipped with necessary information about the driver and will prove to be revolutionary in managing the information database as well as protecting car related accidents and thefts.

In what has been billed as the largest project of its kind of the world, the government of India has passed the 10 million mark for issuing electronic driver’s licences. Of the country’s 110 million drivers, nine per cent have now been registered with electronic driving certificates, according to Gemalto, a digital security firm involved in the project.

The number of drivers in India soared from seven in 1000 in 2007 to 11 in 1000 in 2010 - a doubling since 2000 when 0.5% of Indians had a car.

But the number of car accidents is keeping pace with car ownership. In 2008, road accidents claimed more than 100,00 lives, a number which is expected to reach 150,000 by 2015, as India’s car market booms.
The e-Driver’s License project aims to reduce the incidence of car-related calamity by alerting officials to the driver’s history.

Inside the e-licence is a microprocessor that stores the driver’s data - vehicle registration number, the owner’s identity, insurance details, and pollution control certification status. It also contains security features that can help curb car theft - a big contributing factor to car accidents.

India was second only to Italy in a ranking of the world’s worst drivers, according to a 2010 survey of 2000 people in 80 countries by travel industry pollster Titanic Awards.

The project aims to reduce which is expected to contribute to a reduction in car accidents. Statutory data about the vehicle, its registration, its owner, vehicle insurance and pollution control certification is stored in the microprocessor embedded in the e-Registration Certificate card.

The number of drivers in car is increasing at a rate  Gemalto is running e-Driver’s License projects in Australia, Sweden, Mexico, Finland, Norway and El Salvador.

 
Source : Future Gov
Personal tools
Log in
Supported by:
JICA DFID HIVOS SDC