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Asia Noise News

KL Noise Enforcement Blitz: 820 Summons Issued in Kuala Lumpur Crackdown on Modified Exhausts

Kuala Lumpur police and partner agencies carried out an integrated late-night enforcement operation under Op Selamat 25, targeting road safety issues and excessive vehicle noise in the city centre.

According to local reporting, the operation resulted in 820 summons/fines for various offences during a single enforcement blitz. Authorities also highlighted noise from heavily modified exhaust systems as a key concern, especially in dense urban areas with high-rise buildings where sound reflections can intensify disturbance to residents and businesses.

Key enforcement figures from the operation

  • 820 total traffic fines/summons issued
  • 83 vehicles seized (including 73 motorcycles and 10 cars)
  • 640 offence notices issued by JPJ
  • 12 noise pollution compounds issued by the Department of Environment
  • 7 arrests for various criminal and drug-related offences
  • 4 of those arrests linked to positive drug tests
  • 100 officers involved in the operation

Why this matters for urban noise management

This case is a useful reminder that transportation noise control is not only a technical issue but also an enforcement and public-order issue. In city environments, modified exhaust noise can quickly become a community nuisance because of:

  • late-night operating hours,
  • repeated pass-bys,
  • narrow streets and reflective facades,
  • and the cumulative effect in mixed residential-commercial districts.

For acoustics professionals, these actions also reinforce the importance of:

  • proper baseline noise assessment,
  • source identification,
  • and combining measurement with

Source: Malay Mail / Bernama, “Keeping it quiet: KL police crack down on noisy exhausts with 820-summons blitz” (15 Feb 2026).

Categories
Asia Noise News

Police Delhi catch and seize 500 loud exhausts of Royal Enfield Motorcycles

Police Delhi catch and seize 500 loud exhausts of Royal Enfield Motorcycles

Noise pollution on Indian roads is a major cause of concern with commuters honking incessantly thus creating a lot of commotion and ill-effects. Motorists using aftermarket exhausts on their vehicles also add greatly to noise pollution and it is illegal to use too. Currently, a police drive in Delhi is seeing the cops catch Royal Enfield motorcycles in large numbers for breaking the law by using aftermarket exhausts, reported Cartoq. According to a video posted by Royal Soldier on Youtube, police personnel can be seen forming teams to catch the lawbreakers and issuing challan for using illegal exhausts. They can further be seen removing the exhausts on the spot so that bike owners cannot make use of them again.

In the video, the cops can be seen removing the exhaust on the spot where they have nabbed a particular Royal Enfield and then carefully marking them to keep a record. It is not known if the motorcycles were allowed to be ridden by the owners without exhausts, reported Cartoq. Notably, any vehicle can create loud noise if the exhaust is not installed and Royal Enfield is known to produce the characteristic thump on being started. The noise emanated can become extremely unbearable without the exhaust. The cops were also seen catching modified motorcycles with loud aftermarket horns and pressure horns, reported Cartoq. Extremely loud horns, if they exceed a specific noise level, are illegal in India and vehicles can be booked for noise pollution. The cops in the video can be seen removing the horns too and marking them carefully.

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