Business Standard

M&M to add electric spark to new models

- ALNOOR PEERMOHAME­D Bengaluru, 6 May

The Mahindra Group has decided that all new vehicle platforms, including light commercial vehicles (LCVs), coming from its stable will be architectu­red keeping in mind the requiremen­ts for electric variants. The move will make it easier for Mahindra to offer electric variants on all its new models, unlike now where it must reengineer and retrofit the electric drivetrain­s to existing models.

“Going forward, it is not going to be an existing vehicle getting electrifie­d. When a new platform is conceived in the Mahindra Group, it will start with an ‘electric as an option’ at a very early design stage. This includes the light cargo vehicles,” said Mahesh Babu, CEO of Mahindra Electric.

Mahindra is reaffirmin­g its commitment to the electric vehicle segment in India as it sets it eyes on reaching the lofty goal of selling 100,000 of them by 2022. Further, the decision to change the way vehicles are being designed is being supplement­ed by the developmen­t of high-voltage drivetrain­s by group subsidiary Mahindra Electric. As part of its EV 2.0 plan Mahindra Electric is jointly working with SsangYong on 380 volt electric drivetrain­s which will be globally competitiv­e. Vehicles using this system will have a range of over 250 km and offer performanc­e comparable to gasoline-powered cars. The Korean company has already said it would use the drivetrain­s in building electric SUVs.

“This will put us in the global league, it will be a globally competitiv­e system which will meet all European, Korean, and Indian standards. The system will be high-power, high-performanc­e, high-range and will be coming in around two years from now,” added Babu.

Mahindra Electric is even working on drivetrain­s for electric buses, which the group’s commercial vehicle arm is exploring to use for building zero-emission city buses.

With Mahindra following the global standard practice of keeping a platform on the market for six-10 years, building them to be compatible with electric drivetrain­s now will help it compete when EVs become more mainstream. While its e2o light-weight electric car hasn’t seen too many takers, it continues to believe in the future of electric and is making big investment­s.

Part of Mahindra’s optimism is due to the fact that the government is finally pushing for electric vehicles in India, and is not only setting lofty goals but is also working on laying the groundwork. By tightening the belt on emissions of gasoline-powered vehicles, the country is forcing manufactur­ers to look at alternativ­es such as electric and hybrid technologi­es.

 ??  ?? As part of its EV 2.0 plan Mahindra Electric is working with SsangYong on 380 volt electric drivetrain­s
As part of its EV 2.0 plan Mahindra Electric is working with SsangYong on 380 volt electric drivetrain­s

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