Business Standard

Are we serious about e-cars?

The electric vehicle market in India needs a policy push that goes beyond targets

- VANDANA GOMBAR

to the Society of Manufactur­ers of Electric Vehicles (SMEV). Hybrid car sales totalled 31,000 units. Though sales were higher than the year before, it does not put the country anywhere near the 2020 target. SMEV does not track the sales of electric three-wheelers.

“India’s focus is on two-wheelers. The National Electricit­y Mobility Mission Plan states that 80 per cent of the five-six million target should be met by two-wheelers, and a significan­t part from public transport solutions such as buses, taxis and autos,” says Sohinder Gill, chief executive officer at Hero Electric, and also the official spokespers­on of SMEV.

Where are the multiple vehicle models? Where are the charging points? Where are the incentives?

There are three main things that other countries are doing to promote electric vehicles and that could serve as a good guide for India. | Plentiful charging points: Electric vehicles would not go very far without adequate public charging points. China — the largest market for electric vehicles — has targets for installing millions of charging points and thousands of charging stations by 2020. State-owned companies are leading the installati­on of this infrastruc­ture. The US also has targets for charging infrastruc­ture.

Wireless charging of cars could be a game changer in the future but for now, a fast charge is a market enabler. Tesla Motors’ “Supercharg­ers” manage to provide juice to the Model S and Model X in minutes instead of hours. Over 4,000 of these are installed across the world.

Activity on charging points is in a nascent stage in India. “There is a proposal under discussion which could see Indian Oil fuel outlets also offering charging services,” Gill says. Rajasthan State Electricit­y Board is among agencies in advance talks with the government for installati­on of charging infrastruc­ture pilots.

Globally, sales of electric vehicles (four-wheelers) are set to hit a record in 2016. In the last quarter, almost 160,000 battery electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids were sold, up 60 per cent year on year, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance data. China took the lead, with sales of more than 67,000 vehicles, followed by Europe and North America. Simultaneo­usly, activity is picking up pace in the electric trucks and bus sector. Companies active in this sector range from Warren Buffettbac­ked BYD at one end to niche players like Proterra on the other. Tesla’s Elon Musk talked about the company’s plan for electric heavy vehicles in the part deux of his master plan. | Incentives: The US offers a tax credit to buyers of electric vehicles. There is no registrati­on tax on electric vehicles in Hong Kong. Electric cars are allowed to drive in bus lanes in Norway and additional­ly get tax exemptions.

Incentives are also available for charging stations. As much as $4.5 billion in loan guarantees from the US Department of Energy will support a commercial rollout of charging stations in the country.

There is a subsidy available under the programme called FAME (Faster Adoption and Manufactur­ing of Hybrid and Electric Vehicles in India) for vehicles purchased by March 31, 2017. However, import of electric cars entails a duty, which is why a Volvo plug-in hybrid could cost over ~1 crore ($150,000) in India. In contrast, General Motors’ Chevy Bolt, with its record 238-mile range on a fully charged battery, will begin selling this year in the US at around $30,000. | Policy: Earlier this month, the US put up for discussion a policy on self-driving cars. Many countries have targets for the number of electric vehicles they want on the road. Poland wants one million by 2025 while China wants annual sales of three million units by that date.

Gill suggests making electric twowheeler­s a part of the commercial delivery fleets of online food or merchandis­e selling sites, to push up the cumulative numbers significan­tly beyond the 350,000-mark currently. There also needs to be a mechanism to offer financing for the purchase of these vehicles, he says.

Coal, power and renewable energy minister Piyush Goyal has said that India could become a 100 per cent e-vehicle nation by 2030. What the electric vehicle market needs is a policy push that goes beyond targets.

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