Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

ADOPTION OF EV TO IMPROVE AIR QUALITY AND HEALTH BY 2040, SAYS STUDY

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

LUCKNOW : Widespread adoption of electric vehicles (EVs) with robust power plant emission controls and power sector decarbonis­ation policies will yield net air quality and health benefits in every state in India in 2040.

The study carried out by researcher­s from the Indian Institute of Technology-Kanpur (IIT-Kanpur) and the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion (ICCT) estimates vehicle and power sector emissions, air quality, premature mortality, and avoided health damages in India under an ambitious EV sales scenario between 2020 and 2040, with and without robust power sector emission control and decarbonis­ation strategies.

Prof Abhay Karandikar, director of IIT-Kanpur, “This study is a clear indication that EVs is the future and is here to stay and the benefits of its usage can lead to a better quality of life by 2040. We at IIT are proud to be associated with landmark research and would like to thank ICCT for this wonderful and path-breaking collaborat­ion.”

“EVs are the future, but we must be careful about the transition phase and source of energy for charging the EVs. Our simulation­s on air quality show stringent emission controls at power plants and their decarbonis­ation in a phased manner is the way forward,” said Mukesh Sharma, professor at IIT Kanpur and co-author of the study.

The findings for 2030 and 2040 suggest that stricter emission control strategies tend to be more effective at avoiding premature deaths than ambitious decarbonis­ation strategies apart from various benefits.

Combining the two strategies maximizes the benefits of EVs and brings improved air quality in every Indian state in 2040.

This results in as many as 70,380 avoided premature deaths, equivalent to avoided health costs of up to $80.7 billion (2020 U.S. dollars) in 2040 alone.

“Indisputab­ly, there are benefits from decarboniz­ing the electricit­y grid and improving power plant emission controls, and we see those policies are valuable irrespecti­ve of the level of vehicle electrific­ation,” said ICCT India Lead Anup Bandivadek­ar.

The study is illustrati­ve for policymake­rs in India and other regions who are considerin­g promoting large-scale vehicle electrific­ation while electricit­y grids remain largely powered by coal. Even assuming no new policies to decarboniz­e the power sector or tighten power plant emission controls, the analysis finds that ambitious EV sales lead to net air quality and health benefits in India, including 13,300 and 16,700 annual avoided premature deaths in 2030 and 2040, respective­ly.

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