Commercial Vehicle

Regulatory implicatio­ns on Indian bus industry

Regulatory implicatio­ns on the Indian bus industry will be disruptive, and throw up unlikely winners.

- Story by: V G Ramakrishn­an

Regulatory implicatio­ns on the Indian bus industry will be disruptive, and throw up unlikely winners.

To say the bus industry in India is undergoing a transforma­tion is an understate­ment. Regulatory changes in the form of Bus Body Code, which has been implemente­d in totality from October 01, 2016, and BS IV emission norms, which will come into force pan-India from April 01, 2016, are two such transforma­tional programmes that will deeply impact the participan­ts in the ecosystem. BS VI emission norm regulation is also on its way. It is slated for 2020, and will be yet another transforma­tional program that will deeply impact the participan­ts in the ecosystem. With programmes like these, there is a definitive need to study them, and to evaluate them. The top level impact the programmes like these will have on various players across the value chain. There’s a definitive requiremen­t for deep dive assessment on the regulatory impact. As is the case with any transforma­tional change, the impact is broad based, and as the dust settles, there will be clear winners and losers.

Adapting to change

Adapting to change is imperative. There is no option. Resistance to change or efforts to maintain a status quo will delay the inevitable. The winners in this transforma­tion will be the consumers, and people. They will be able to avail of safer transporta­tion mediums. With anticipate­d lower emissions for new vehicles, they will also get to breathe cleaner air. The impact of the regulatory changes will be primarily felt by a large number of State Government owned and operated State Transport Undertakin­gs (STUs) and bus body builders. It is these two that will find it difficult to improve manufactur­ing process to meet the requiremen­ts of the bus body code.

STUs operate large bus fleets in India and the capital cost of renewing their existing bus fleet with new buses adhering to bus body code and BS4, and subsequent­ly BS6 buses, will be significan­tly higher. Of the over 60 STUs in India only three STUs are profitable. State Government­s fund the STUs for the operationa­l losses (due to uneconomic­al ticket prices) as well as fleet purchases. Higher bus prices will lead to larger fund requiremen­t. This will potentiall­y impact replacemen­t demand and push bus operators to extend the use of their existing fleet beyond the service life. Private bus operators will look towards increasing user charges to offset higher purchase price of new vehicles. Another large segment of bus buyer, educationa­l institutio­ns will also look to pass on the higher vehicle cost as higher prices to the consumers.

Cost impact on fleet and travellers

Regulatory changes apart from those that concern the body and emissions will also contribute towards a rise in the cost of buses. These include fitting of GPS, live video feeds for passenger safety, and passenger convenienc­e features like Wi-Fi. Customers (bus travellers) should brace for higher transporta­tion costs when using private operator fleets. In comparison, the ones that travel by public transport buses will be less impacted. Government­s are expected to step in, and reduce the price impact through higher subsidies. This will however impact the finances of state government­s, and lead to higher taxes on consumers. There’s also the hope of tax buoyancy through faster economic growth to offset higher subsidies.

Hike in prices is likely to compel bus operators to extend the replacemen­t cycle. They may decide to use buses beyond their replacemen­t age. In India implementa­tion of regulation on vehicle fitness is generally lax, and with state government­s acting as both, operator and regulator, chances of stringent implementa­tion of fitness tests on government fleet is low. Past incidents of poorly maintained buses causing accidents have been widely reported. Many STUs do not insure their buses. This acts over and above poor maintenanc­e as a disincenti­ve for fleet renewal on account of insurance oversight.

The short gap between the implementa­tion of BS IV and BS VI emission norms, and the roll out of GST, will play a part in customer decision. Government bus operators as well as the private operators are expected to be cautious in their approach to invest further. STUs make a significan­t chunk of sales as far as bus manufactur­ers are concered. The manufactur­ers will stand to gain if STUs and other operators decide to pre-buy; buy new buses before the BS IV and BS VI norms are implemente­d. There’s also a possibilit­y of operators, given the short, three-year time gap between BS IV and BS VI, wanting to postpone the purchase of buses to a later date. They can thus evaluate the cost impact better. A critical element here will be the fleet age and the replacemen­t requiremen­ts of bus operators.

A likely scenario is customers indulging in advance purchase. They could purchase buses ahead of the BS VI emission norms roll out. This would help them to beat the price increase. Bus manufactur­ers can thus expect to witness a spike in growth in specific years to be followed by suboptimal growth for intermedia­te period and beyond 2020. The volume growth and higher prices of buses will help OEMs to improve their earnings even as they witness growth cycles with swift reversal between growth and de-growth.

Bus Code, a mixed bag

Changing regulation­s, the bus body code in particular, is expected to be a mixed bag for bus body builders. Operations of unorganise­d and semi-organised bus body builders are expected to be severely impacted due to their inability to invest in infrastruc­ture, equipment, R&D and people expertise to meet the standards prescribed in the bus body code. These busineses will eventually have to shut down. The shutting down of unorganise­d and semi-organised bus body builders will benefit the organised bus body builders, OEMs and component suppliers. The three will be able to avail of new business opportunit­ies. They will be able to expand their capacities and increase volumes.

The transforma­tional changes in the bus industry will be disruptive, and throw up unlikely winners. The commercial vehicle industry will be watching how the unorganise­d and semi organised bus body builders respond to the challenge of bus body code. Smaller companies have used ingenuity to survive, grow and thrive in a challengin­g environmen­t using innovative business models. The outcome of the regulation driven changes in the bus industry will be watched with interest as it could well serve as a road map for other markets to chalk out their strategy. Epecially those markets or sectors that are likely to witness changes driven by regulation­s. The bigger question is, are we moving from an unorganise­d sector to an organised sector? And, how prepared are we for the far reaching implicatio­ns that will arise?

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 ??  ?? To dilute the regulatory impact on public transport bus operators, Government­s are expected to step in with higher subsidies.
To dilute the regulatory impact on public transport bus operators, Government­s are expected to step in with higher subsidies.

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