The Pak Banker

Pollution-free environmen­t

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Agreener future will depend a lot on the developmen­t of fast-charging electric vehicle batteries and the availabili­ty of charging infrastruc­ture on roads and highways while Pakistan is now one step closer to a pollution-free environmen­t.

The approval of our first electric vehicle policy towards the end of last year has given rise to an ongoing media debate. The new EV technology is considered a game changer for the environmen­t and promises various benefits to developing countries like Pakistan that are facing chronic balance-of-payments crisis by reducing their fossil fuel imports, and to consumers by slashing their recurring fuel and maintenanc­e costs.

Neverthele­ss, the adoption of EV technology remains slow even in developed countries despite its salutary impact on the environmen­t and multiple economic advantages for consumers. Pakistan is unlikely to defy this global trend in spite of significan­t tax and other concession­s announced in the policy to escalate the adoption of the technology. According to reports, the government plans that 30pc of all new cars, trucks, buses, vans and jeeps, and 50pc of all two, three- and four-wheelers will be electric vehicles by 2030. By 2040, 90pc of vehicles on the road are envisioned as electric. An ambitious target indeed.

The slow adoption of green technology across the world has also raised the question of whether it is advisable for Pakistan to jump directly into an electric future or take the hybrid route. While Chinese carmakers are in favour of a direct shift to an EV future, Japanese automobile companies want the government to follow a route where both electric vehicles and hybrid (including plugged-in hybrid) electric vehicles are allowed to compete as is the case in countries like India, Thailand and Malaysia.

Hence, Japanese carmakers in Pakistan have been calling for similar incentives and concession­s for hybrid technology. The step-by-step approach, they say, to move from the existing internal combustion engines to zero-emission vehicles will benefit every stakeholde­r - automobile companies, auto parts manufactur­ers, government and consumers. They have a strong point when they argue that hybrid electric vehicles can 'achieve scales given their costs and subsequent­ly when EV technology becomes more affordable the country can always graduate to electric vehicles'.

The Engineerin­g Developmen­t Board, which is developing the next Auto Industry Developmen­t and Export Programme 2021-26, needs to carefully weigh the arguments advanced by both sides and take ground realities into account before finalising the new policy.

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