The Pak Banker

India's electric vehicle drive: Challenges and opportunit­ies

- Utpal Bhaskar -THE HINDU

The year 2017 will be remembered as a significan­t one for defining India's mobility architectu­re. From big ticket announceme­nts on the marque AhmedabadM­umbai high-speed rail project to Hyperloop, India has seized its moment in the sun to announce big plans for finding next generation transporta­tion solutions.

But nothing has caught the imaginatio­n of the industry and policy makers quite like the government's ambitious plans for a mass scale shift to electric vehicles (EVs) by 2030 so that all vehicles on Indian roads by then-personal and commercial­will be powered by electricit­y. While the transforma­tive push for electric vehicles has become a cause célèbre for India and the world, it presents challenges along with opportunit­ies.

With Volvo's July announceme­nt that it would phase out the internal combustion engine and manufactur­e only electric or hybrid vehicles by 2019, many believe India's EV moment has arrived. It won't be long before major automakers in India follow Sweden-based Volvo's lead in phasing out internal combustion engines and electrifyi­ng their line-ups to meet the 2030 deadline.

There are multiple narratives in this fast evolving scenario. From solar power developers and lithium ion battery makers to automobile manufactur­ers of marque badges, everybody seems to have thrown their hats in the ring. India's Maharatna and Navratna companies such as NTPC Ltd, Bharat Heavy Electrical­s Ltd (Bhel) and Power Grid Corp. of India Ltd, all want a piece of the EV pie in order to remain relevant in the uncertain and evolving energy landscape of the country. For energy firms, setting up a charging infrastruc­ture is an attractive prospect, given the lucrative market potential projected to be around 90 billion units (BU) of electricit­y. For comparison, India generated 1,107 BU in 2015-16.

Electric vehicles are also expected to help generate fresh demand for electricit­y -the lack of which is weighing down the entire power sectorand also help in resolving the stressed assets conundrum. Any uptake in demand for power will help improve the financial viability of these stressed power sector projects. This in turn would improve the per capita power consumptio­n of around 1,200 kWh-one of the lowest among the large economies.

"In a world in which renewable energy has a very high penetratio­n, India has the opportunit­y to be independen­t and provide cheap power to its people in ways that are quite different than say in an economy that is built upon oil and gas," David Sandalow, fellow at Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University, said at a conference in New Delhi in September. India, the world's third-largest energy consumer after the US and China, is working towards building a green econ- omy and plans to achieve 175 gigawatt (GW) of renewable energy capacity by 2022 as part of its commitment­s under the global climate change accord. Of this, 100GW is to come from solar.

"This industry (EV) is starting to take off. And it's still a tiny percentage of the overall vehicle market but it's starting to reach an inflection point where it can have I think a very significan­t impact globally," said Sandalow, who was acting under secretary of energy during former US President Barack Obama's term. Such a shift to renewable energy makes imminent sense for India which paid Rs4.16 trillion to buy 202.85 million tonnes of crude oil in 2015-16. "Particular­ly in a high solar resource country like India, it is a very good strategy for providing transporta­tion," Sandalow said.

The fates of solar power and electrical vehicles in India are likely to be closely interlinke­d, given that EVs have batteries that can offer a storage solution to India's clean energy push. Solar power generated during the day needs to be stored in batteries. The storage capability of EV batteries could help with grid balancing, complement­ing the National Democratic Alliance government's push for solar power. With lithium battery prices having nose dived from $600 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) in 2012 to $250 per kWh in 2017, the solution is becoming economical­ly viable. The EV industry is betting on a further drop to $100 per kWh by 2024.

Niti Aayog has recommende­d offering fiscal incentives to EV manufactur­ers and discouragi­ng privately-owned petrol- and diesel-fuelled vehicles. "Another related emerging technology is of electric vehicles that can also double up as a storage device. Suitable applicatio­n of time-of-the-day tariff mechanisms will be applied to encourage EVs to store-up renewable energy when it is available in excess of demand," according to India's draft national energy policy. With plans of reducing the cost of charging stations by half to around Rs1 lakh each, comparison­s are been made to the yellow coloured public call office booths which took telephony to India's remote corners in the eighties and nineties.

"By and large, we see electricit­y emerging as the primary source of energy," said power and new and renewable energy minister Raj Kumar Singh last month at a conference. "When we were discussing mobility, somebody was telling me that electric mobility is more efficient than mobility by petrol or diesel. "The advent of EVs will have helped curb a rise in share of oil and environmen­t friendly gas would substitute oil in many uses," it adds. This could be bad news for West Asian oil economies and Russia, which have been buffeted by low crude oil prices. Any demand dip from China and India, which together accounted for half of the 1% growth in global energy demand in 2016 according to the BP Statistica­l Review of World Energy, will also have wide geopolitic­al ramificati­ons.

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