Skip to main content

Nepal introducing smart licences and new number plates

The Nepalese government is introducing smart licences and embossed vehicle number plates from the 2012/2013 fiscal year which begins in July, 2012. The new initiative to use a uniform number plate with unique security features will greatly enhance enforcement of vehicle registration compliance and also make it easier to identify and take action on traffic offences
April 25, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The Nepalese government is introducing smart licences and embossed vehicle number plates from the 2012/2013 fiscal year which begins in July, 2012. The new initiative to use a uniform number plate with unique security features will greatly enhance enforcement of vehicle registration compliance and also make it easier to identify and take action on traffic offences.

According to officials at the Ministry of Labour and Transport Management, some 70 per cent of two-wheeler and 30 per cent of the four wheel light vehicles fail to renew their registration, so it is expected that the new system will address the problem and recover around US$500,000 annually. The department will also add the name, address and work details on the new embossed number plate that will help to track down the vehicle in case of a traffic violation or accident.

Nepal’s government has estimated it will cost around US$32,000 for the embossed vehicle number plates, which it will finance, while the 943 Asian Development Bank (ADB) will fund the smart licences project, estimated to cost about US$0.25 million.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Nepal road transport plan finds funding
    February 27, 2017
    Nepal’s Kathmandu-Tarai highway now looks likely to be built under an engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract. This is a revision from the build-own-operate-transfer (BOOT) model previously suggested. Nepal's Ministry of Physical Infrastructure and Transport has announced the change for the project, which had an estimated cost of US$1.04 billion when put forward in 2015. The detailed project report (DPR) for the highway is likely to be set out by consortium, from India. The Nepalese Governm
  • Nepal highway subsidence problem causing traffic disturbance
    March 11, 2017
    Subsidence on a key stretch of highway in Nepal is causing major traffic disturbance. The BP Highway, also known as the Banepa- Sindhuli- Bardibas Road, has suffered subsidence on the Nepalthok-Khurkot stretch. The collapsed section measures 27m long and is causing delays for drivers. This Highway is an important route as it connets Nepal’s capital Kathmandu with Eastern Terai. Vehicles have been diverted to an alternative route, although part of the roadway is still being used to carry traffic in one d
  • Europe-Asia road link
    February 9, 2017
    The governments of China, Kazakhstan, Belarus and Russia have finally approved a project for the building of a new transcontinental road, which will connect Asia and Europe. The new route is much-needed and will speed the transportation of cargo between the two continents, according to Maxim Sokolov, Russia’s Minister of Transport. The idea for the building of the road was first proposed by the European Commission around 2005. It was prompted by the ever growing volume of trade between the EU and Chin
  • Elevated expressway underway in Bangladesh
    February 29, 2012
    The Bangladesh Government has announced the winner of the bidding process for its huge elevated highway project in Dhaka.