Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Policy shift charges up Maruti Suzuki’s hybrid plan for India

- Malyaban Ghosh

NEW DELHI: Maruti Suzuki India Ltd has started work on its first full hybrid car, with the government finally signalling its intention to offer incentives for such vehicles, along with electric cars.

India’s largest carmaker is working on greater localizati­on of parts for such vehicles while it prepares for the opening of a lithium-ion battery plant in Gujarat being built jointly by parent Suzuki Motor Corp. and Toyota Motor Corp.

Kenichi Ayukawa, managing director of Maruti, said on Wednesday that the company is expecting tax benefits from the Union government for hybrid cars. “We are pushing for localizati­on of components like lithium-ion batteries and others. We are already in the process of implementi­ng the battery plant and are planning for a strong hybrid vehicle as well,” Ayukawa said in an interview on the sidelines of a press conference. “We are trying to collaborat­e with Toyota in pushing the hybrid system nationwide if the government supports (with some cuts in tax rates).”

The government was initially inclined to offer the incentives only to electric cars in a bid to promote the sale of such eco-friendly vehicles and arrest rampant pollution in its major cities. However, relentless lobbying by Japanese firms in favour of hybrid cars led to a shift in the stance.

Subsequent­ly, the ministry of road transport and highways recommende­d a reduction in the rate of goods and services tax levied on hybrid cars. The department of heavy industry also sought incentives for 10,000 hybrid vehicles in the second phase of the Faster Adoption and Manufactur­ing of Hybrid and Electric Vehicles (FAME). The Prime Minister’s Office is also in favour of incentiviz­ing manufactur­e of lithium-ion batteries that can be used for both hybrid and electric vehicles.

Suzuki and Toyota have formed a partnershi­p to develop small electric and hybrid vehicles for the Indian market and it is expected that Suzuki will collaborat­e with Toyota for the first full hybrid car that will be launched by the company in India.

Suzuki has two alliances: one where it will produce lithium-ion batteries in collaborat­ion with Denso Corp. and Toshiba Corp. and another with the world’s largest automaker, Toyota, to sell electric vehicles in India by 2020.

“Globally, Toyota is the best when it comes to hybrid technology and we are trying to learn (from them). We will try to collaborat­e. We, at Suzuki, also have some system but Toyota’s technology is very advanced. We have to learn a lot of things,” said Ayukawa.

“The hybrid technology is still not so much cheaper,” he said. “So, for small cars, we have to consider a different option.”

Carmakers, especially those from Japan, are lobbying the government to popularize hybrid vehicles as this will give them enough room to develop electric vehicles while reducing vehicle emissions and comply with stricter emission rules set to be enforced from 2022 under corporate average fuel efficiency (CAFE) norms.

From 1 April 2017, India adopted CAFE norms, which require cars to be 30% or more fuel-efficient from 2022 and 10% or more by 2021.

 ?? MINT ?? Maruti Suzuki India is working on greater localizati­on of parts for hybrid vehicles
MINT Maruti Suzuki India is working on greater localizati­on of parts for hybrid vehicles

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India