snoop1130 Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago Picture courtesy of KhaoSod In a determined push to reduce air pollution, Thailand's Department of Land Transport (DLT) has intensified inspections of truck and bus emissions. As of February 24, nearly 1,000 vehicles have been temporarily banned for failing to meet emission standards. DLT Director General Jirut Wisalchit announced that the current efforts are part of a broader strategy by the Ministry of Transport to combat harmful PM2.5 pollution. In just one day, 515 vehicles were tested, and four exceeded the emissions threshold. Since October 1, a total of 68,694 vehicles have been inspected nationwide, leading to 909 being banned for excessive emissions. Owners must repair and re-inspect their vehicles to return to the roads legally. Failing to comply could result in legal action, reported The Thaiger. Residents play a crucial role in this initiative by reporting smoke-belching vehicles. They can report violators by calling the 24-hour hotline 1584, messaging via Line at @1584DLT, visiting the Facebook page "1584 Public Transport Complaints," or through the website http://ins.dlt.go.th/cmpweb/. Your participation helps keep Thailand’s air clean! -- 2025-02-25 1 1 1
Sir Dude Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago Just cube the worst offender's vehicles instantly on the side of the road at inspection stops. 1 1
richard_smith237 Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago 2 minutes ago, Sir Dude said: Just cube the worst offender's vehicles instantly on the side of the road at inspection stops. Indeed.... Park them out of the way... BUT... the issue is so many public busses too... Lorrys, delivery trucks, public busses - so many of them belching out horrific fumes and they have been doing so for decades.... Firstly, public vehicles (busses) are never stopped, because they are simply public vehicles... so who's to blame there ?... public officials of course, but there's no money to get cleaner busses... so the same old fume bleching non-AC busses are kept running.... .... So, how did the beaten up old lorries get away with this over the past decades throughout all the 'other crack-downs' ??? Simple.... 'Stickers' !!.... And if that seems odd to you, then the explanation will highlight the depth of the systemic graft involved ingrained in every facet of Thai society... Policemen (at checkpoints) are paid off and in return they issue a 'start-sticker' to be displayed on the truck windscreen which identifies that they have 'paid up'.... https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/general/2681949/sticker-on-truck-to-be-probed https://aseannow.com/topic/1311702-police-chief-says-won’t-tolerate-truck-sticker-bribery/ 1 2
ikke1959 Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago Waaw a crackdown again for 2 days and than business as usual... Drive around and see how many black smoke cars drive around and nobody cares... Just a simple new filter and problem solved, but if there is no enforcement no awareness and no need to change why do it?? Checking if tax is paid is more important 2
hotchilli Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 12 hours ago, snoop1130 said: Since October 1, a total of 68,694 vehicles have been inspected nationwide, leading to 909 being banned for excessive emissions. Owners must repair and re-inspect their vehicles to return to the roads legally. Failing to comply could result in legal action, And there's the problem 2
jcmj Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Well they certainly haven’t been to Pattaya yet. Doesn’t help the fact that they “may be fined”. They should be taken off the roads, fined and not released until they get it fixed and signed off on, but hey TIT 1 1
rwill Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago I've always wondered how all those pickup trucks that bellow black smoke when they accelerate pass the annual smog check. 1 1
Ralf001 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 2 minutes ago, rwill said: I've always wondered how all those pickup trucks that bellow black smoke when they accelerate pass the annual smog check. I roll coal in my daily pickup... it is only 4 yrs old, no annual inspections until it is 7.
rwill Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 1 minute ago, Ralf001 said: 3 minutes ago, rwill said: I've always wondered how all those pickup trucks that bellow black smoke when they accelerate pass the annual smog check. I roll coal in my daily pickup... it is only 4 yrs old, no annual inspections until it is 7. I am aware of that exemption but most of these vehicles are already past the 7 year mark.
Ralf001 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 5 minutes ago, rwill said: I am aware of that exemption but most of these vehicles are already past the 7 year mark. Iam aware some are older than 7 years... but many are not. 2
Presnock Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 7 minutes ago, Ralf001 said: I roll coal in my daily pickup... it is only 4 yrs old, no annual inspections until it is 7. I'm not sure if you are telling the truth as you believe it or just ignoring the laws. Unless it is a very special pickup, then yearly inspection is required to renew the sticker. 1
Ralf001 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Just now, Presnock said: I'm not sure if you are telling the truth as you believe it or just ignoring the laws. Unless it is a very special pickup, then yearly inspection is required to renew the sticker. There is no yearly inspection required until the vehicle (pickup/car) is 7 years old. 2
Presnock Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Just now, Ralf001 said: There is no yearly inspection required until the vehicle (pickup/car) is 7 years old. well being the owner of vehicles from early 2000 until recently, I had to have my vehicle inspected every year in order to get a new sticker and googled the inspection of vehicles in Thailand and it states yearly too for pickups and cars. 1 2
Popular Post johng Posted 5 hours ago Popular Post Posted 5 hours ago New vehicle's don't need a yearly inspection...The reason they spew black smoke is that the owner has had them modified to produce more horse power ,noise,smoke and "street-cred" 2 2
JimHuaHin Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago The annual 1 day or 1 week crackdown. Status quo will return shortly.
Ralf001 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 28 minutes ago, Presnock said: well being the owner of vehicles from early 2000 until recently, I had to have my vehicle inspected every year in order to get a new sticker and googled the inspection of vehicles in Thailand and it states yearly too for pickups and cars. And how many of them were under 7 years old ?
ChaiyaTH Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago I can remember reading that 13 years ago, around the coup as well, many other times... Meanwhile in Vietnam they changed like almost all public busses to VinFast electric busses with AC, USB chargers and free wi-fi... (during covid). Is actually the only place I use the bus regular in SE asia, hanoi.
Presnock Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 14 minutes ago, Ralf001 said: And how many of them were under 7 years old ? all.
Ralf001 Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Just now, Presnock said: all. well... you was getting stooged then... are you are telling porky pies. It has always been 7yr for cars (5yr for bikes). I bought my first (new) car when I moved to Thailand in 2005. current have 3 vehicles over 7 and 2 under 7. 3 over require yearly inspection. 1
WHansen Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 2 hours ago, Presnock said: well being the owner of vehicles from early 2000 until recently, I had to have my vehicle inspected every year in order to get a new sticker and googled the inspection of vehicles in Thailand and it states yearly too for pickups and cars. You are having your pants pulled down mate. As has already been said, pickups and cars are due an inspection after it reaches 7 years old, bikes and scooters is 5 years. 1 1
worgeordie Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 17 hours ago, snoop1130 said: In just one day, 515 vehicles were tested, and four exceeded the emissions threshold. 4 out of 515 , unbelievable , last time I was getting my truck tested in MOT testing station there was this old, very old truck , very bad condition ,maybe carrying fish or ice , it was rusted to bits , then they did the smoke test part , the whole place was filled up with thick black smoke , I am thinking no way is he getting a pass,...I was wrong , regards worgeordie 1
watchcat Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 12 hours ago, ikke1959 said: Just a simple new filter and problem solved, but if there is no enforcement no awareness and no need to change why do it?? What "filter" would that be?
ExpatOilWorker Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago An9P1C3yn_SMSbfj7h5shbWKrj-8Xka0KIkGo0iDMv6oo4-NT7VSRw88F2mqfAZOxVFcipWL_5axBpwriPXcL8E.mp4 1
Moonlover Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 13 hours ago, ikke1959 said: Just a simple new filter and problem solved, Unfortunately it is rarely that simple. The real offenders are old clapped oil burners that have never seen the inside of a workshop since the day they took to the roads. Yes, there are annual inspections, but as we saw with the burnt out bus incident, the 'inspection consists of an exchange of the readies.
Moonlover Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 32 minutes ago, ExpatOilWorker said: An9P1C3yn_SMSbfj7h5shbWKrj-8Xka0KIkGo0iDMv6oo4-NT7VSRw88F2mqfAZOxVFcipWL_5axBpwriPXcL8E.mp4 Quite obviously this is NOT an exhaust emissions issue. That's the result of a coolant problem. 1
Purdey Posted 53 minutes ago Posted 53 minutes ago I once read the diesel engines are clean if well maintained. I like diesel powered vehicles as they are cheap and easy to maintain. Royal Enfield Taurus Diesel Motorbike
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now