Business Today

Battery Boost

The EV battery space is a big opportunit­y for manufactur­ers as it is at the core of the energy ecosystem transition

- BY PRERNA LIDHOO @PLidhoo

THE FUTURE OF electric mobility is bright in India, says a recent report by the India Energy Storage Alliance (IESA). The country’s EV market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 49 per cent by 2030 and may even cross annual sales of 17 million units, it says. What this also points to is that over the next few years, the EV battery manufactur­ing and recycling space should see immense growth. While the space is still nascent, a report by the NITI Aayog and Rocky Mountain Institute says India’s EV battery market could surpass $15 billion by 2030, while market research firm IMARC expects the space to grow at a CAGR of 27.12 per cent in 2022-2027.

Already, global players like Foxconn and domestic ones like Amara Raja are getting into this business, giving India’s EV landscape a much-needed push. Amara Raja Group’s new energy business unit, for instance, has launched a state-of-theart R&D facility to develop advanced cell chemistry batteries. The company has a road map to invest in giga factories that will manufactur­e lithium-ion (Li-ion) cells and offer battery packs and EV charging solutions. “New-age energy storage technologi­es and the manufactur­ing landscape in India are coming of age and are expected to gain pace in the coming years, thanks to proactive policy drives from the central and state government­s,” says Vijayanand Samudrala, PresidentN­ew Energy, Amara Raja Batteries.

Then there’s Attero Recycling, an electronic­s waste recycling firm, which plans to build a 15,000-tonne Li-ion battery recycling plant in Telangana with an investment of `600 crore. Its current capacity is 4,500 tonnes.

Experts say the government may consider rolling out a production-linked incentive scheme for battery components as has been done for cell manufactur­ing. These plants need to be planned and constructe­d in parallel to the cell manufactur­ing plants so that by the time the need for the raw material emerges, Indian manufactur­ers are ready to supply, says Ankur Khaitan, MD and CEO of The Advanced Carbons Company (TACC), a subsidiary of graphite electrode manufactur­er HEG. Through TACC, HEG plans to invest around `900 crore over the next three years to set up a facility to manufactur­e graphite anodes for Li-ion cells.

Khaitan says battery manufactur­ing is a huge opportunit­y as it is at the core of the transition of the energy ecosystem, adding that manufactur­ers should also look to make components for Li-ion batteries.

This battery boost may just be what the country’s EV industry needs to jumpstart manufactur­ing.

India s EV battery market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 27.12 per cent in 2022-2027

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