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Rajasthan News Updated May 24, 2026

Rajasthan Bans Govt-Funded Foreign Travel, Pushes EVs for Financial Discipline

The Rajasthan government has banned all government-funded foreign travel for ministers and officials to enforce financial discipline. It also mandates a phased transition of all petrol/diesel government vehicles to electric vehicles. The order promotes car pooling, video conferencing, and the use of e-Office and Raj-Kaj Portal to reduce physical correspondence. Additionally, departments are directed to install solar energy systems and promote sustainable agriculture practices.

Rajasthan restrict govt-funded foreign travel, pushes EVs to ensure financial discipline across depts

Jaipur, May 24

In a major move to ensure financial discipline in public expenditure and efficient management of financial resources, the Rajasthan government has restricted government-funded foreign travel for ministers, officers, and employees, while mandating a transition towards electric vehicles, digital governance, and reduced public expenditure across departments.

The directive was issued on May 22, following Prime Minister Narendra Modi's appeal to save petrol and diesel and improve resource efficiency. The state government has issued instructions for strict compliance across departments to ensure "efficient management of resources and financial discipline in public expenditure."

According to the circular issued by the Finance Department (Budget Section), the state has laid out a multi-point framework covering transport reforms, administrative efficiency, energy conservation, and scheme implementation.

On government vehicles and official travel, the order stated that "the Chief Minister has limited the number of vehicles in his convoy. All Ministers and heads of corporations/boards/commissions, etc., who are permitted convoy vehicles shall also use only the minimum essential number of vehicles in their convoy."

It further mandated that "all petrol/diesel government vehicles shall be converted in a phased manner into electric vehicles," and that "for officials whose routine work remains within the city, any new vehicles to be purchased shall be only electric vehicles."

The circular also prioritised clean mobility in contractual transport, stating that "in contract vehicles as well, priority shall be given to the use of electric vehicles in a phased manner," and directs departments to ensure implementation for officials whose duties are largely within cities or states. It added that "officers and employees travelling towards the same destination shall give priority to car pooling (Car Pooling) in government/contract / private vehicles."

Significantly, the order made foreign travel on government expenditure completely off-limits, stating, "Travel abroad at government expense shall remain completely prohibited."

On administrative functioning, the Finance Department has directed that "events, ceremonies, etc., organised from time to time by various departments of the State Government, autonomous bodies, public sector undertakings, etc. shall be conducted in government buildings," and emphasised greater reliance on digital tools. It further states that "meetings shall, as far as possible, be organised through video conferencing."

Pushing for digital governance, the circular mandated that "use of e-Office and e-files shall be ensured across various offices" and that priority be given to the "Raj-Kaj Portal instead of physical correspondence." It also encouraged online capacity building, stating that "wherever possible, training programmes shall be conducted online in place of physical training programmes," with the use of the "Karmayogi Portal (iGOT)" maximised.

On policy implementation, the directive said the Energy Department should prioritise installation under the "PM Surya Ghar Scheme," while the Agriculture Department has been tasked to promote "Natural Organic and Sustainable Agriculture," increase "Agri-Stack" registration, and reduce "urea for non-agricultural purposes," along with promoting rational fertiliser use through a special campaign.

The order also mandated solar adoption and energy conservation in government infrastructure, stating that "installation of solar energy systems for electricity consumption shall be ensured in government buildings," and that offices must ensure electricity is used judiciously with equipment switched off after working hours.

For enforcement, the circular assigned responsibility to senior officials, stating, "the Principal Secretary/Secretary in-charge of the concerned administrative department and the Head of Department shall be responsible" for ensuring strict compliance with the directives.

The Rajasthan government said the measures are aimed at strengthening financial discipline, improving efficiency, and promoting sustainable governance practices across the state administration.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Vikram M

Good intentions, but let's see how much of this is actually implemented on the ground. We've seen so many circulars before that gather dust. The EV conversion is great in theory, but our charging infrastructure is pathetic. Hope they've thought about that.

Rohit P

What about the impact on small businesses that depend on government contracts for fuel and travel? Not saying austerity is bad, but need to think about livelihoods too. Also, will there be proper training for using e-office systems? Babus are notorious for resisting digital change.

Aditya G

Excellent move by CM Bhajanlal Sharma ji! Following Modi ji's call for resource efficiency. The carpooling directive is practical—I've seen how many empty government vehicles roam around. Also, promoting organic farming under this framework is smart. Rajasthan needs sustainable solutions for water and energy. 🌿

Kavya N

I appreciate the intent, but why only restrict government-funded foreign travel? What about privately funded trips where ministers go abroad for 'study tours'? Also, will they actually enforce the solar installation rule? Rooftop solar in Rajasthan should be a no-brainer given our sunshine 300+ days a year!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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