Deccan Chronicle

Electric cars: Clarity needed

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Year 2030 is the deadline by when all vehicles in India are to be electricit­y-driven and emission-free. With 14 of the world’s 20 most polluted cities, India has to work hard to curb emissions, 11 per cent of which is contribute­d by public transport. The hugely ambitious 100 per cent conversion policy to electric traction replacing internal combustion by 2030 has got many setbacks already, and industry is out on a limb about the date by which at least public transport should be emission-free. The policy shift to cheaper batteries rather than subsidisin­g all EVs may not be misplaced while battery prices are falling thanks to the Tesla technology. The company has also put out its first home car charger for $500, but clarity is still missing in the policy push towards EVs.

The misgivings Volkswagen’s chairman voiced over electric cars’ pricing can’t be discounted either. This is particular­ly relevant to India where consumers look at an average price of around $10,000 for a car rather than $35,000 overseas. The greater thrust in India will have to be on electric two-wheelers, autos and buses. In 2017, four per cent of vehicle sales was electric-driven, which is minuscule, but promising in a nation of mixed traffic density. But unless the government fixes its policy soon on alternativ­e traction to vehicles and drives the EV ecosystem in a specific direction, even the highly-evolved automobile industry can’t be expected to deliver by a deadline of 2040 or later. The internal combustion engine may become a relic in a few decades in the developed world but it might survive in India longer as policy initiative­s have so far been quite muddled.

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