Hindustan Times (Noida)

Govt unveils major e-cycle push; city added 495 charging points since Dec

- Alok KN Mishra alok.mishra1@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Delhi’s first 10,000 electric cycle buyers will each get purchase incentives of 25% (up to ₹5,500), while the first 1,000 will get an extra incentive of ₹2,000, the state government said on Thursday as it unveiled a major plan to push e-cycles in the national capital, as part of its ongoing efforts to expand the city’s electric vehicle market. The announceme­nt comes even as Delhi added nearly 500 charging points to its arsenal since December last year, taking the count to 825, among the country’s highest.

Delhi is the first Indian state to introduce such a policy and carve out a separate category for electric cycles, delinked from two-, threeand four-wheelers, state transport minister Kailash Gahlot said during a press conference on Thursday.

Chief minister Arvind Kejriwal in tweet described the move as another important step in the fight against pollution. “Delhi government’s hugely successful e-vehicle subsidy policy is being enhanced with a subsidy for electric bicycles today. E-cycles will help Delhiites reduce the use of polluting vehicles,” Kejriwal said.

“When we started the EV policy, the initial target was that 25% of all new vehicles registered by 2024 will be electric-powered. About two-and-a-half years ago, this was only around 1 or 2%. This has now reached 12.6% in March 2022,” Gahlot said on Thursday.

The state will also provide purchase incentives of 33% of up to ₹15,000 per vehicle to the first 5,000 e-cargo cycles buyers to support the city’s food delivery and e-commerce executives, he said. In addition to the purchase incentives, all e-cycle and cargo e-cycle buyers will also be eligible for a scrapping incentive of up to ₹3,000 per vehicle for old twowheeler­s registered in Delhi.

Gahlot said the city had made several strides in its adoption of electric vehicles since the Delhi EV Policy was flagged off in August 2020.

“Delhi is making its mark as the EV capital of India. Nearly 46,000 EVS have been sold till under the Delhi EV policy till date,” he said.

The number of charging points is set to jump to 1,325 by the end of June this year, state government officials said, with work underway on 500 new points, to be located in 100 new stations. These are likely to be opened by June 27.

These 100 new Delhi government EV charging stations will offer the city’s cheapest EV charging rates, said officials.

Data from the Delhi government showed that the state has 597 charging stations, where the 825 charging points are located. This is a significan­t jump from November 2021, when the city had only 330 charging points, spread across 167 charging stations.

The city also has 165 battery swapping stations, where used batteries can be replaced with charged units, the data showed.

Jasmine Shah, vice-chairperso­n of the Dialogue and Developmen­t Commission (DDC) and chairperso­n of the state government’s Charging Infrastruc­ture Working Group, said Delhi’s EV policy aims to have a charging station within a 3km radius anywhere in the city.

“Among the 100 new EV charging stations, 71 will be set up at Metro stations. The locations for these charging stations have been chosen very cohesively. Most of the areas we are targeting are under-served. Currently, most charging points are placed within the Central Delhi and NDMC [New Delhi Municipal Council] area, with the outer areas lacking the facility in comparison,” said Shah.

“Currently, only a very small section uses e-cycles, but we are bringing them to the mainstream, especially for those involved with deliveries… People associated with food delivery, for instance, won’t have to buy expensive two-wheelers but can work traveling 40-50km by e-cycle only,” said Shah.

Experts said the unbridled rise in petrol and diesel prices have pushed people towards electric vehicles.

Delhi sold 3,406 electric vehicles in January this year (8% of total vehicle sales that month), 4,547 (10.7%) in February and 5,996 (12.6%) in March. This number touched 962 in the first six days of April, making up 8.5% of all vehicles sold in this time.

Amit Bhatt, managing director (India) of the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion said: “With the growing number of EV charging points, more people will be motivated to buy EVS because more charging options will be available. The Delhi government has taken some progressiv­e steps in developmen­t of charging infrastruc­ture at variety of location like shopping malls, offices, residentia­l premise which is a welcome steps. However, to get maximum benefit from EV, the same needs to happen in Noida, Ghaziabad, Gurugram etc,” he said.

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