Tata Motors plans 10 new EVS by 2025
Tata Motors will aggressively push its presence in electric vehicles (EVS) and launch 10 new batteryelectric vehicles by 2025 across segments in India, its chairman, N Chandrasekaran, has said.
The company, which has the largest share of India’s electric car market, will also invest in lithium-ion cell manufacturing in India and Europe to establish a proper supply chain for its zeroemission vehicles in the coming decade.
“In India, EV penetration in our portfolio has now doubled to 2 per cent this year and we expect the penetration to increase exponentially in the coming years. Tata Motors will lead this change in the Indian market. By 2025, Tata Motors will have 10 new BEV vehicles,” Chandrasekaran said, addressing shareholders in the annual report for FY21.
This comes at a time when the government is nudging automobile makers to develop and manufacture EVS to reduce carbon footprint, and has brought out policies offering incentives to buyers opting for such vehicles.
In the FY22 Budget, the government announced the lowering of goods and services tax on EVS to 5 per cent from 12 per cent, and offered income-tax incentives to individuals purchasing EVS.
Currently, Tata Motors has two fully electric models -- Nexon EV and Tigor EV -- in the market. The electric version of the Altroz is expected to be launched in the coming months. The Nexon EV is India’s best-selling electric passenger vehicle with sales of more than 4,000 units since its launch in January 2020. The development of an EV ecosystem, from manufacturing to battery plant to after-sales service, requires collaboration from a diverse set of businesses. The Tata group has been one of the early identifiers of this challenge and have marshalled the expertise of group companies into building it.
At the launch of Nexon, the company’s first EV, Chandrasekaran had announced that seven Tata group companies -- Tata Motors, Tata Power, Tata Chemicals, Croma, Tata Auto Components, and Tata Motors Finance -- would work together to build a complete ecosystem for EVS. Earlier this year, the company’s British subsidiary, Jaguar Land Rover, announced that six out of every 10 Land Rover models would go electric by 2030 as it ditches the combustion engine in favour of the zero-emission technology as part of its ‘Reimagine’ strategy.