Deccan Chronicle

E-cars face a long road ahead

■ Over 8,000 units sold in six years as cost, poor infra deter aspirants

- ANURAG KOTOKY

Foreign portfolio investors have offloaded equities worth around Rs 3,000 crore in just three trading sessions of October amid fears of global recession/trade war. This follows a net investment of around Rs 7,850 crore by FPIs into equities in Sept. As per depositori­es data, overseas investors pulled out Rs 2,947 crore from equities and Rs 977 crore from debt on a net basis. Hyundai Motor Co. launched India’s first electric SUV this summer with a TV commercial urging millennial­s to “Drive Into the Future.” A few months later, the automaker finds itself on a lonesome road.

In a nation of about 150 million drivers, only 130 Kona SUVs were sold to dealers through August. That slow pace is emblematic of the difficulti­es carmakers face in establishi­ng an electric foothold in the fourth-biggest auto market, even with committed government support.

The Kona sells for about $35,000 while the average Indian earns about $2,000 a year. Yet Kona’s sticker price only kicks off the conversati­on about why EVs aren’t gaining traction in India—there’s also a lack of charging infrastruc­ture, a reluctance by banks to finance purchases and an unwillingn­ess among government department­s to use EVs as directed. Barely more than 8,000 EVs were sold locally during the past six years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. China sells more than that in two days, according to BloombergN­EF projection­s.

“The affordabil­ity of electric cars in India is just not there,” said R.C. Bhargava, Chairman of Maruti Suzuki India Ltd. “I don’t think the government or the car companies expect that in the next two to three years there will be any real buying of electric vehicles.”

The segment still isn’t making meaningful strides more than four years after the government started promoting cleaner vehicles. In February, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion committed to spending $1.4 billion on subsidies, infrastruc­ture and publicity.

The potential of India’s EV market can’t be ignored. There are only 27 cars for every 1,000 Indians, compared with 570 for the same number of Germans, giving global automakers an opportunit­y to challenge the dominance of Maruti that sells every other car on local roads.

Maruti’s not introducin­g its first EV until next year. Tata Motors Ltd. and Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. build some base-level electric cars, yet they have a limited range or are exclusivel­y for government use. The Kona gives Hyundai a first-mover advantage in a market where EVs may comprise 28 per cent of new vehicle sales by 2040, according to BNEF.

Not only Hyundai sees opportunit­y in Asia’s thirdlarge­st economy. MG Motor, the iconic British carmaker owned by China’s SAIC Motor Corp., and Japan’s Nissan Motor Co. see EVs as a way to expand in the country.

“Somebody has to take the leadership, and it will trickle down,” said Rajeev Chaba, Managing Director of MG Motor India, which plans to launch an electric SUV by December.

The process of scaling up will be slow, and MG Motors would be satisfied selling 100 cars a month initially.

“We have to start somewhere,” Chaba said.

Right now, though, consumers pass over electric cars for bigger, longerrang­e and cheaper gas guzzlers, said Vinkesh Gulati, Vice President of the Federation of Automobile Dealers Associatio­ns, which represents more than 80 per cent of automobile dealers in India.

More than half of the passenger vehicles sold in India last year cost $8,000 or less, according to BNEF. Electric cars won’t achieve price parity with gasolinepo­wered cars until the early 2030s, BNEF said.

“Consumers care about EVs, the excitement is there,” Gulati said. “But that stops the moment we tell them the price.”

Yet even for those who can afford the Kona, plugging in is problemati­c. Nidhi Maheshwary, a 40year-old finance profession­al working near New Delhi, wanted to buy an EV to show her children an example of environmen­tal responsibi­lity.

So when Hyundai launched the Kona, Maheshwary ordered one. Sounds easy, but it didn’t turn out that way.

Almost immediatel­y, she got into a spat with neighbors about charging the SUV in her apartment building’s basement lot. The residents’ society said it posed a fire risk — even though Hyundai engineers and the fire department said it was safe. So Maheshwary charges the car at her office.

India had an estimated

650 charging stations for cars and SUVs in 2018, according to BNEF. China, the largest market for EVs, has about 456,000 charging points, official data shows.

There’s another factor besides income that makes it difficult to pay for one of these cars. The unaffordab­ility of EVs also stems from the unavailabi­lity of financing, said Pranavant P, a partner at Deloitte India focusing on the future of mobility.

Until there’s an establishe­d secondary market for EVs, banks and other institutio­ns are hesitant to extend purchasing loans, he said. A majority of Indian vehicle sales are financed by lenders.

The government, both federal and local, will have to offer help for EVs to be adopted in the mass market, said Puneet Anand, group head of marketing at Hyundai Motor India. Modi’s budget in July included incentives such as reduced taxes, income tax benefits and import duty exemptions for certain EV parts. The first beneficiar­ies will be the ubiquitous scooters and motorcycle­s — with subsidies meaning to support sales of 1 million two-wheelers, compared with 55,000 electric cars.

Yet the government still needs to practice what it’s preaching. Energy Efficiency Services Ltd., a joint venture of state-run companies responsibl­e for replacing state vehicles with EVs, awarded its first tender in September 2017 for 10,000 cars. But as of July, agencies had accepted only 1,000 of them. Now EESL is offering the vehicles to taxi companies.

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