Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Diesel phase-out plan may hit Maruti’s market share

- Malyaban Ghosh malyaban.g@livemint.com ■ ■

NEW DELHI : Maruti Suzuki India Ltd is staring at a potential drop in both sales and market share as it weighs a plan to stop selling diesel passenger vehicles from April next year.

India’s largest passenger vehicle maker garners nearly 30%, or about 450,000 units, of its annual sales from diesel vehicles. It expects to push about half of those buyers to shift to petrol or compressed natural gas (CNG) vehicles by offering incentives, and also provide CNG options in more models. It, however, fears that the remainder will shift to diesel vehicles of rival brands, according to an internal projection prepared by senior executives of Maruti.

Maruti is considerin­g the drastic step on the future of its diesel range as the imposition of Bharat Stage-vi emission norms from April 1, 2020 would make such vehicles costlier by at least ₹2 lakh per unit in order to make them comply with the new rules. This is expected to particular­ly lead most small-car buyers to shift to petrol or CNG models. Small cars comprise the bulk of Maruti’s sales volume.

RC Bhargava, Maruti’s chairman, said the company might stop producing diesel variants of some of the smaller cars as the price difference between petrol and diesel variants would be substantia­l. He did not say whether the company would completely stop making diesel cars.

“We have to manufactur­e vehicles according to what is likely to be acceptable to customers. If we have a bigger vehicle, then we may continue. Ultimately, we have to judge what the customers want and develop vehicles accordingl­y,” said Bhargava.

According to the internal forecast, Maruti might lose annual sales of at 125,000-150,000 vehicles if it did not have any diesel car in its portfolio, as most of its competitor­s were likely to be ready with BS-VI diesel engines by next April, said two people aware of the developmen­t.

According to the projection, sales of high-selling Ertiga, Vitara Brezza and S-cross models will be hit the most if Maruti pulls the plug on diesel vehicles.

Maruti Suzuki spokespeop­le didn’t reply to an email .

If Maruti loses market share, it will be the first since 2012-13 for the most profitable unit of Suzuki Motor Corp. In FY13, Maruti’s market share fell to 39% as diesel vehicle sales picked up at the expense of petrol ones. The company managed to raise its market share to 51% by introducin­g a slew of vehicles, especially in the above ₹7 lakh segment. Suzuki is yet to decide on whether to upgrade its current 1.5-litre diesel engine launched with the Ciaz sedan in March to comply with BS-IV norms. The company may, therefore, start FY20 without a diesel engine but introduce one later in the year.

The two people cited earlier said the loss of volumes and market share was projected as the worst-case scenario and that it could be limited if Maruti managed to convert diesel car buyers.

Some senior Maruti executives wanted diesel cars to stay, as rivals Hyundai Motor Co. and Tata Motors Ltd would also have diesel cars, said the first person. “The losses can be contained by the company since the diesel vehicles will be significan­tly expensive, but converting 30% of the volumes will be tough since some of the customers would still want to buy diesel variants,” the person added.

Mint reported on February 15 that Maruti was in talks with Suzuki on the future of diesel cars in India that included whether the company should cease production of diesel vehicles. “Maruti’s absence in the diesel portfolio, especially in B and C segment cars, can impact their market share adversely, but at the same time it is an opportunit­y for other players,” said Puneet Gupta, associate director-vehicle forecast (South Asia) at IHS Markit. “But we should not forget that Maruti Suzuki understand­s the pulse of the consumer the best. It looks like the company is banking heavily on CNG cars and on the assumption that consumers will shift to gasoline cars in the years to come.” He said the share of diesel cars was declining, but they still made up a large share in the overall car market.

 ??  ?? Maruti is considerin­g the step on the future of its diesel range as the imposition of Bharat Stage-vi emission norms from April 1, 2020.
Maruti is considerin­g the step on the future of its diesel range as the imposition of Bharat Stage-vi emission norms from April 1, 2020.

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