Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Diluting NBC Part IV-good or bad

Diluting NBC Part IV-good or bad

The National Building Code (NBC) of India is the country’s foundational safety framework for all buildings. It integrates structural design, fire and life safety, building services, environmental performance, and accessibility. Because it is based on scientific research, disaster lessons, and professional consensus, any dilution of the NBC raises a serious concern for public safety and long-term societal risk.

However, recent discussions in policy and regulatory circles suggest that there may be a move to significantly modify NBC Part IV or convert it into a simplified handbook-style document, largely under the broader objective of improving the country's Ease of Doing Business.

India is witnessing one of the fastest urban transformations in the world. High-rise residential towers, mega hospitals, airports, shopping complexes, data centres, and industrial facilities are rapidly shaping the country’s built environment. As buildings grow taller, denser, and more complex, the importance of fire and life safety regulations becomes more critical than ever before.

The first and most critical impact is on structural safety. NBC provisions, aligned with IS codes for loads, concrete, steel, seismic actions, and ductile detailing, ensure buildings can withstand both everyday usage and extreme events. Even a minor relaxation in material quality, detailing, or load assumptions can significantly increase the probability of structural distress or collapse, especially in seismically active or cyclone-prone regions. With growing urban density, such risks magnify, affecting thousands of occupants at once.

This raises a fundamental question that the entire built-environment community must carefully examine:

When most nations strengthen their fire safety regulations after every major fire incident, why should India consider weakening its own fire safety framework?

Fire safety regulations are not administrative obstacles. They are life-saving systems embedded in building design. Every provision—from staircase width to smoke extraction—exists to protect human life during emergencies.

Diluting these provisions in the name of convenience or economic efficiency could have serious consequences for public safety.

The role of Karnataka’s civil engineers

The warning raised by Karnataka’s civil engineers on the dilution of the National Building Code (NBC) deserves serious and immediate attention.‼️

The NBC is not a procedural formality—it is the backbone of structural safety, fire protection, accessibility, sustainability, and disaster resilience. Any dilution, whether in the name of ease of construction or short-term economic considerations, directly compromises public safety and long-term urban resilience.

As India moves towards the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047, growth cannot come at the cost of engineering ethics, scientific rigor, and hard-earned lessons from past failures. Weakening codal provisions risks creating unsafe buildings, increased lifecycle costs, and irreversible damage to public trust.

It is imperative that policymakers engage deeply with practicing engineers, academicians, and professional bodies before implementing amendments. Codes must evolve, but only through evidence-based research, field experience, and a commitment to safeguarding human life.

Why the Potential Dilution is Considered Bad (Risks)

·        Endangering Public Safety: NBC Part IV sets strict standards for fire resistance, evacuation (staircases, exits), and refuge areas in high-rise buildings. Diluting these can lead to fatal disasters.

·        "Ease of Doing Business" Pressure: Experts argue that the push to weaken the code is driven by developer interests looking to cut costs and accelerate construction, rather than prioritizing safety.

·        Undermining Expert Standards: The NBC is a comprehensive document developed over 65+ years by experts. Critics believe changes driven by non-engineering lobbies threaten to undermine this legacy.

·        Structural Failure Risk: Weakening the code risks increasing the likelihood of fire spreading due to poor compartmentation (the division of buildings into fire-resistant sections). 

Fire Safety Codes Across the World:

Across the world, governments treat fire safety as a national responsibility that cannot be compromised. Most developed nations operate with clear, unified and enforceable fire safety codes that apply across the country.

For example:

• The United States follows the NFPA (National Fire Protection Association) codes and standards.

• The United Kingdom enforces strict fire safety regulations under its Building Regulations and Fire Safety Order.

• Australia’s National Construction Code integrates comprehensive fire safety provisions.

• The International Fire Code (IFC) provides globally recognised fire safety guidelines.

Whenever catastrophic fires occur, governments in these countries respond by strengthening regulations, increasing inspections, and improving enforcement mechanisms.

After incidents such as:

• The Grenfell Tower fire in London,

• The Station Nightclub fire in the United States,

• Major high-rise fires in Dubai,

Regulatory authorities moved quickly to tighten safety provisions, improve building compliance systems, and increase professional accountability.

The global philosophy is clear:

Fire safety regulations are designed to save lives and must never be weakened for convenience.

The Misinterpretation of “Ease of Doing Business”

Cabinet Deregulation cell proposals to Dilute NBC results in huge Energy consumption & increases carbon footprints in buildings become unsustainable. People suffer from health issues & medical expenses increase exponentially.

India’s efforts to improve the Ease of Doing Business have played an important role in simplifying procedures, reducing delays, and encouraging investment.

However, the concept of ease of doing business must not be misunderstood as a justification for weakening essential safety regulations.

In certain sections of the construction industry, there is a perception that fire safety provisions:

• Increase construction costs

• Require additional building space

• Add complexity to approval processes

While these concerns may arise from project feasibility considerations, they must be examined carefully.

Fire safety requirements such as refuge areas, fire stairs, fire compartmentation, smoke extraction systems, and fire command centres are not optional features. They are the result of decades of global learning from fire tragedies.

Removing or weakening such provisions may reduce construction costs in the short term, but it could dramatically increase the risk to human life.

Safety cannot be compromised in the pursuit of convenience.

India’s Real Challenge: Implementation

The real challenge India faces today is not the strength of the regulations but the effectiveness of implementation.

Across the country, many urban local bodies responsible for building approvals often lack:

• Adequate fire engineering expertise

• Proper training in NBC provisions

• Dedicated systems to verify fire safety compliance

As a result, the same provisions are interpreted differently across jurisdictions, leading to inconsistencies in enforcement.

The solution to this challenge is not to dilute the code, but to strengthen the ecosystem responsible for implementing it.

India must focus on:

• Capacity building for approval authorities

• Training municipal engineers in fire safety design

• Establishing uniform compliance mechanisms

• Integrating digital approval systems with fire safety checks

• Strengthening third-party fire safety audits

Improving implementation will enhance both efficiency and safety, without weakening regulatory safeguards.

Under the Constitution of India, Fire Services fall under the State List and therefore legislation and enforcement are primarily the responsibility of individual State Governments. The National Building Code (Hereafter it will be renamed as National Build Standard) indeed serves as a model framework and its implementation depends on state adoption through local Acts, Rules, and municipal by-laws.

However, the concern being raised by many professionals today is the growing inconsistency in safety requirements across states, particularly in the built environment. When buildings, technologies, and risks are becoming increasingly uniform across the country, the safety expectations of citizens should ideally not vary significantly from one state to another.

The intent behind advocating “One Nation – One Safety Rule” is not to dilute the constitutional role of the States, but to encourage a stronger national consensus on minimum fire and life safety standards, supported by technical bodies, professional institutions, and regulators. Just as the NBC acts as a model code, a coordinated national framework with broader adoption could significantly improve consistency in implementation and enforcement.

The Risk of Converting a Code into a Handbook

There is also discussion in certain circles about converting NBC Part IV into a handbook or advisory document.

While the intention may be to simplify interpretation, such a move carries significant risks.

A Code is mandatory and enforceable. A Handbook is advisory and interpretative. Codes form the basis for legal compliance and building approvals, whereas handbooks provide guidance but cannot enforce safety obligations.

If a critical section such as Fire and Life Safety is reduced to a guidance document, compliance could become subjective rather than mandatory.

For a country constructing thousands of high-rise buildings every year, such ambiguity would be dangerous.

India needs clear, enforceable safety regulations, not optional guidelines.

The Way Forward for India

India’s rapid urbanization requires stronger safety frameworks, not weaker ones.

The country must focus on:

• Strengthening NBC implementation

• Training municipal authorities

• Promoting professional accountability

• Encouraging multidisciplinary collaboration

• Enhancing awareness among building owners and citizens

Fire safety must remain a non-negotiable pillar of national development. For NBC it says Central Govt doesn’t have authority over land & buildings & proposed to dilute it by removing parts 0, 1, & 3, etc . But here it comes out with new proposals on same land & buildings. Dilution of NBC provisions such as 100% coverage, unlimited FAR, any height & setbacks, etc will lead to Health, Fire & other Engg safety disasters. Cabinet Secretariat proposals are un-sustainable & damage the built environment. of public & private safety.

One Country-One Constitution, one country-one Tax, one country-one grid, one country-one card, one country one PM, why not One country-One Code (NATIONAL BUILDING CODE) Since 1970 it is guiding construction. Approx 1.25 cr Cost involved, all Engineers request govt not to dilute it. 

Please Stop Dilution of NBC.