Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

EESL set to issue tender for 10,000 additional EVs

- Amrit Raj amrit.r@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: In what comes as another boost for India’s electric vehicle programme, state-owned Energy Efficiency Services Ltd (EESL) has said it will float another tender of around 10,000 electric vehicles (EVs) during March-April, much before it expects to complete the current bidding process in June.

“We will come up with another tender for similar number of electric vehicles. Basic specificat­ions for those EVs will remain the same,” Saurabh Kumar, MD, EESL, said at a press meet on Wednesday.

EESL gave out a similar contract in September to Tata Motors Ltd and Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd, kicking off India’s EV procuremen­t programme.

These vehicles will be used to replace petrol and diesel cars used by the government and its agencies, which have around half-a-million cars, of which about a third are leased.

Kumar said EESL expects to earn a profit of ₹250 crore on revenue of ₹3,500 crore in the current fiscal year.

The government contracts may be too small for any company’s sales growth but the frenetic action around them seem to have kick-started electric mobility in the country.

Mahindra lost out to rival Tata Motors Ltd in a government contract for 500 electric vehicles but later said it would match the lowest bid of ₹10.16 lakh per vehicle made by Tata Motors as it wanted to be part of the government’s electric mobility mission.

Currently, electric vehicle sales are low in India, rising 37.5% to 22,000 units in the year ended 31 March 2016 from 16,000 in 2014-15.

Only 2,000 of these were cars and other four-wheelers, according to automobile lobby group Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers.

The government wants to see 6 million electric and hybrid vehicles on Indian roads by 2020 under the National Electric Mobility Mission Plan 2020.

“This is a welcome move as far as electro-mobility is concerned. But, we would wait for the charging infrastruc­ture ecosystem to come up before moving into that direction,” said Shekar Viswanatha­n, vice-chairman, Toyota Kirloskar Motor Pvt Ltd.

Any shift to EVs will help reduce pollution and fuel imports. This assumes significan­ce given India’s energy import bill of around $150 billion, which is expected to reach $300 billion by 2030. India imports around 80% of its oil and 18% of its natural gas requiremen­ts. India imported 202 million tonnes of oil in 2015-16.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Shift to EVs will help reduce pollution, fuel imports
MINT/FILE Shift to EVs will help reduce pollution, fuel imports

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