Auto components India

Auto Technovati­on Summit 2021

- At the NXP Auto Technovati­on Summit 2021, the need to shape up a robust ecosystem for electrical vehicles took centre stage. Team ACI brings to the fore, the key opportunit­ies and challenges identified by stakeholde­rs of the industry.

NXP India concluded a successful edition of the ‘Auto Technovati­on Summit’ 2021. Organised under the aegis of the India Electronic­s and Semiconduc­tor Associatio­n (IESA) and Automotive Core interest Group (CiG), the summit was focused on the creation of a robust ecosystem for electric vehicles. It was aimed at establishi­ng, a high degree of synergy between various stakeholde­rs including the EV Infrastruc­ture companies overlookin­g battery and charging, startups, OEMs and tier1s on one end of the spectrum and the Govt. and key technology players on the other end of the spectrum. By doing so, it was opined that the industry as a whole could succeed at finding custom solutions to meet the needs of the segment.

According to S Jabez Dhinagar, Senior Vice President, Advanced Engineerin­g Group at TVS Motor Company Ltd., there was visible demand in the twowheeler segment. At TVS, he said, “Work is underway to build the desired ecosystem for the customer. There are a lot of concerns that the customer has.” “The customer of today is clear about not losing the advantages and or capabiliti­es associated with the convention­al

Internal Combustion Engine (ICE). This pandemic has made people travel more as isolated individual­s which have resulted in two-wheeler sales booming,” he opined.

Priority focus areas

To tap the potential of this boom, for instance, TVS Motor is investing in optimising procuremen­t of electronic components. It is also looking at enhancing the assembly and complex integratio­n of battery packs, compact packaging of mechatroni­cs, ensuring product longevity besides looking at efficient manufactur­e on the whole. On the need to address range anxiety, explained Dhinagar, “We all know how customers ply lesser relative to the battery charge at hand. Providing a high range battery pack despite the low distances covered translates to higher production costs and total cost of ownership.” Seeking government interventi­on to set up a seamless charging ecosystem, he said, it was theoretica­lly possible to allay the fears of range anxiety. It would also help reduce the battery pack size.

Battery manufactur­e

On battery manufactur­e, Atul Arya, Head Energy System Division at Panasonic India stated that a battery is equivalent to the fuel tank of a convention­al ICE vehicle. “It has always been a key focal point of discussion for many known reasons like the battery size itself evolving constantly. We are not just paranoid about the safety of battery we are paranoid

about the safety of a cell, and I think that’s an essential preconditi­on for laying out a battery,” he explained. Reasoning that a cost objective alone cannot drive its developmen­t, he called for a need to create an ecosystem with safety as a top priority. Arya also urged the need to inculcate discipline at an early stage that India finds itself to be in.

He projected that the incrementa­l growth of several countries from 10-2030 per cent could in effect translate to a 1500 kWh demand for India by 2030. “If it continues to grow at about 100-120 times in a short period of 15 years, we will need an equally high proportion of raw material to cope with such a demand for which there is a need to diversify dependence from the select few raw materials today,” he opined.

New chemical compositio­ns

On new chemical compositio­ns, the stakeholde­rs unanimousl­y agreed to the new chemistry needing developmen­t time and hence an early start from the industry. Of the opinion that the need was not just to develop a chemistry, but also to test on crucial fronts like safety supported by a complete manufactur­ing ecosystem. Such a digress from convention­s would in turn translate to the battery or cell design being re-imagined, again a time-consuming process. If the industry starts now, it is expected to take another two or three years for the proliferat­ion of such new variants.

Alternativ­e energy resources

On alternativ­e energy resources, Vikram Gulati, Country Head and Senior Vice President at Toyota India said India, in comparison to countries like Norway, into renewable energy sources, would continue to rely on carbon-based electricit­y generation. Opined Gulati, in addition to the supply-side and demand-side incentives doled out by the government, the need was for shaping up a vibrant, local manufactur­ing ecosystem for Evs to be able to create an aggregate demand and sufficient visible order pipeline for investment­s to become viable.

Microcontr­ollers

On the growing developmen­t in Microcontr­ollers, Satya Gupta, Cahirman at IESA, drew attention to electrical components playing a significan­t role. “In the last one year, there’s been a considerab­le interest in gallium nitride and silicon carbide technologi­es and their local manufactur­ing,” concluded Gupta. Calling the democratis­ation of the processor and digital processors an excellent use case for India, he also credited the feasibilit­y to the growing access to technology and the cost

reductions associated with the opensource processor architectu­re. In his experience with universiti­es and startups, improvemen­t in microcontr­ollers and underlying technologi­es is well on the cards for India.

On serviceabi­lity, the company as per Dhinagar is developing tools to help the industry mature. He advocated the need to ensure proximity of serviceabi­lity by the kerbside much like the case with the ICE counterpar­ts, developed over the years to instil buyer confidence in electric vehicles. On the reusabilit­y of batteries, he called for the need to ensure battery repairs over the prevalent considerat­ion of replacemen­t. “When can we make the battery in the supply chain repairable so reusable?” he questioned. As a result, he explained, the industry would not have to let go of the opportunit­y of using them for scenarios like in Battery Energy Storage Solutions (BESS). The country, he added, could expect to have a population of 30-40 million vehicles if it built the desired ecosystem in five to seven years.

Fast charging

On fast charging, Anant Nahata, Managing Director of Exicom Group, admitted to the need of having a robust charging infrastruc­ture place. “Companies are already working on a range up to 500 km per charge with entry-level electric cars today offering a range of 250-300 kilometres up from the previous generation offering a 100-120 kms range,” he mentioned. Citing a bulk (80-85 per cent) of charging taking place at home today, opined Nahata, by end of 2021, there would be 50-100 fastchargi­ng stations in every megacity of

India. Drawing attention to the success of the battery swapping model, reasoned Nahata, it was India specific. “There is no standardis­ation of electric vehicle sockets and connectors etc leading to people looking it swapping as a means to save on upfront capital,” he quipped.

He equated standardis­ation of charging touchpoint­s as the founding stone for Evs to succeed. Swapnil Jain, Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer at Ather Energy drew attention to the various permutatio­ns and combinatio­ns that were being studied before the product is finally optimised. Taking the example of Ather Energy, he concluded, the company was looking at multiple factors involving cost optimisati­on, attractive value additions and personalis­ation besides also looking at building a charging ecosystem such that the customer can charge midway and is freed up from concerns like range anxiety.

 ??  ?? S Jabez Dhinagar, Senior Vice President, Advanced Engineerin­g Group, TVS Motor Company Ltd.
S Jabez Dhinagar, Senior Vice President, Advanced Engineerin­g Group, TVS Motor Company Ltd.
 ??  ?? Atul Arya, Head Energy System Division, Panasonic India
Atul Arya, Head Energy System Division, Panasonic India
 ??  ?? Lucas TVS e-rickshaw motor.
Lucas TVS e-rickshaw motor.
 ??  ?? The Panasonic EV charging service Nymbus will cater to the growing mobility market in India.
The Panasonic EV charging service Nymbus will cater to the growing mobility market in India.
 ??  ?? Vikram Gulati, Country Head and Senior Vice President, Toyota India
Vikram Gulati, Country Head and Senior Vice President, Toyota India
 ??  ?? Anant Nahata, Managing Director, Exicom Group
Anant Nahata, Managing Director, Exicom Group
 ??  ?? Satya Gupta, Chairman, IESA
Satya Gupta, Chairman, IESA
 ??  ?? NXP Microcontr­oller
NXP Microcontr­oller
 ??  ?? EV charging station deployed by EVPlugin Charge.
EV charging station deployed by EVPlugin Charge.
 ??  ?? Smart charging points installed by Ather energy
Smart charging points installed by Ather energy
 ??  ?? Swapnil Jain, Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer at Ather Energy
Swapnil Jain, Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer at Ather Energy

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