Khaleej Times

Suzuki frets about India’s electric shift despite sales boom

- Maki Shiraki and Naomi Tajitsu

tokyo — A sudden move to electric cars in India, which is considerin­g electrifyi­ng all vehicles over the next 15 years, could catch Japan’s Suzuki Motor Corp out in its largest market.

“As the industry shifts towards EVs (electric vehicles), when it comes to India, our volumes are so large that I worry that we could be caught flat-footed if there was a sudden shift towards electrific­ation,” CEO Toshihiro Suzuki said on Thursday.

India appears to be focusing on electric vehicles in a shift away from a government policy that incentivis­es both hybrid and battery- electric cars. Suzuki, which makes the Baleno compact hatchback and the Vitara Brezza compact SUV, dominates the Indian market through its majority stake in Maruti Suzuki India, the country’s larg- est automaker, but neither produces battery- electric cars at the moment.

Current sales of electric cars in India remain negligible, mainly due to the high cost of batteries which make the vehicles out of reach for many buyers in a country where cars can cost Rs250,000 rupees ($3,868). A lack of charging stations is also likely to slow the introducti­on of EVs.

But while strong sales of gasoline-powered vehicles in India drove a record quarterly operating profit at Japan’s No 4 automaker, and prompted a 25 per cent upgrade to its full-year profit forecast to 300 billion yen, which would be an all-time high, chief executive officer Suzuki said he was “anxious” about the future. “Our re- sults may be what they are, but they don’t offer me much comfort,” he told reporters at a results briefing.

Suzuki earlier this year announced it was in talks with Toyota Motor Corp to trade expertise in parts supplies and R&D as the compact car maker has admitted it has struggled to keep up with rapid developmen­ts in non-petrol engines and self-driving cars.

A rapid tightening of Indian regulation­s on petrol vehicles could have a big impact on Suzuki, which generates roughly half of its global sales in the fast-developing country. In the three months to September, sales in India jumped 19.4 per cent to 457,000 units. In Japan, sales increased 6.2 per cent.

 ?? — AP ?? Toshihiro Suzuki, president of Suzuki Motor Corp, walks by an e-Survivor concept car at a presentati­on in Tokyo.
— AP Toshihiro Suzuki, president of Suzuki Motor Corp, walks by an e-Survivor concept car at a presentati­on in Tokyo.

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