India Charged To Be Global Hotspot For Electric Mobility

The new analysis released by the World Economic Forum, the International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation and the Ola Mobility Institute shows there are ten States and Union Territories building momentum for electric vehicle usage across three areas: manufacturing, infrastructure, and services sectors. Given India’s role as part of the Global Big Four automotive players (among the US, China, Japan), large-scale changes to the Indian market would impact the industry’s global footprint.

The report EV Ready India - Part 1: Value Chain Analysis of State EV Policies examines programs and policies in Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Delhi, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Uttarakhand, and Uttar Pradesh. It highlights the possibilities for the sector and builds a common framework for analysing state EV policies through trend analysis of value chains.

“With many more states in the process of designing their EV policies, policymakers, businesses, and practitioners alike can use this framework to analyse state policies for sustainability and longevity,” said Christoph Wolff, Head of Mobility, World Economic Forum. “The role of government is crucial for accelerating adoption. Right now, the uptake of electric vehicles is slow due to the high upfront cost and range anxiety. But, long-term investment in R&D will create sustained growth.”

"India has taken up an ambitious target to become a $5 trillion economy by 2025,” said Anand Shah, Head, Ola Mobility Institute. “the country has placed equal importance on growth that is environmentally sustainable. Mobility holds significant promise for India to enable low-carbon solutions. OMI, in partnership with the World Economic Forum, intends for this framework to support the country’s readiness to go electric.”

While the approaches vary amongst these states and territories, the report highlights three emerging trends. The first is that most states aspire to be manufacturing hubs for EV and EV components. Production of clean-fuel batteries, recycling and storage are incentivised across the board. This aligns well with the national Make in India agenda and can provide case studies for how to roll out similar production facilities. The Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra EV policies emphasise heavily on promoting EV manufacturing, for example.

The second trend, infrastructure development, was largely a response to anxiety around the range of EVs: ie most state has provisions for installations of charging infrastructure in public and private places. Uttar Pradesh is targeting 2 lakh charging stations by 2024. Andhra Pradesh is targeting 100% electrification of buses by 2029.

The third trend is an emphasis on the services the EV value chain can provide through public awareness. These include skilling programmes in Tamil Nadu, fiscal incentives in Maharashtra and non-fiscal incentives like retrofitment services in Telangana. These are all examples of how states and territories try to connect the consumers and manufactures.

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