IANS | 07 Jan, 2024
As reports surfaced about tech billionaire Elon Musk arriving in
India next week to announce a Tesla manufacturing unit in Gujarat
(although no official confirmation has come yet), the focus has once
again shifted to ramp up the public infrastructure for electric vehicles
(EVs) in the country in order to meet the ambitious 2030 goal of the
government.
India needs to have a robust backbone for charging
infrastructure across the length and breadth of the country with
considerations of traffic and population density, as it aims to break
the barriers for large-scale adoption of electric vehicles.
India’s
top nine cities, with a population of over 40 lakh each, would require
18,000 public EV charging stations by 2030, according to the recent
government data.
“As per inputs received from the Ministry of
Power, preliminary studies conducted for the nine cities, which include
Delhi, Mumbai, Pune, Ahmedabad, Surat, Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad,
and Kolkata, all with a population of over 4 million, indicate a
requirement of 18,000 public EV charging stations by 2030,” according to
Mahendra Nath Pandey, Union Minister of Heavy Industries.
Currently, more than 9,000 public EV charging stations are operational in the country with over 16,000 EV chargers.
India
may need a minimum of 1.32 million charging stations by 2030 to
facilitate the rapid adoption of electric vehicles (EVs), according to a
recent report released by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).
It
is projected that approximately 106 million EVs will be sold every year
by 2030. To ensure an ideal ratio of 1 charger for every 40 electric
vehicles, India will need to install over 4,00,000 charging stations
annually, with a cumulative total of 1.32 million chargers by the
targeted year, according to the CII report.
“The government has
set the ball rolling on accelerated adoption of EVs, aiming to achieve
sales penetration of 30 per cent for private cars, 70 per cent for
commercial vehicles, and 80 per cent for two and three-wheelers by 2030.
The foundation for this will be laid by the creation of robust charging
infrastructure,” said Vipin Sondhi, Chairperson – CII National
Committee on Future Mobility (2022-23) and former CEO and MD, Ashok
Leyland and JCB.
“This presents a huge opportunity for India and
the domestic industry", Sondhi added, calling for a conducive policy
environment to enable startups, MSMEs and large companies to rapidly
roll out charging infrastructure across the country.
The
government has been supporting the EV industry through schemes such as
FAME1 and FAME2 with a major focus on charging infrastructure.
According
to Akshit Bansal, CEO and Founder of EV charging solution provider
Statiq, the evolving landscape of the transportation sector is
witnessing a radical transformation, with the widespread adoption of EVs
emerging as a key strategy to curb carbon emissions.
“In line
with our commitment to quality and accessibility, Statiq is steadfast in
its pursuit of deploying 20,000 EV charging stations by 2025. The
momentum in India's electric vehicle market is set to grow
substantially, driven by government policy interventions, technological
advancements, cost-effective mobility options, and an increasing
environmental consciousness among consumers,” said Bansal.
The
Indian EV market is experiencing notable expansion, with a particular
focus on meeting the surging demand for cleaner transportation, which is
also necessitating a parallel expansion of charging infrastructure to
cater to escalating demand.
The country may see 1 crore electric
vehicle (EV) sales annually by 2030, generating nearly 5 crore jobs,
according to Nitin Gadkari, Union Minister of Road Transport and
Highways.
As per the Vahan database, 34.54 lakh EVs are already
registered in the country, said the minister during the ‘19th EV EXPO
2023’ late last month.
The country has the potential to become the
top EV player in the world with the government’s efforts, Gadkari
asserted, adding that the Centre has permitted retrofitting of existing
polluting vehicles into hybrid and fully EVs.
India's EV market
has the potential to achieve over 40 per cent penetration with $100
billion revenue by 2030, a substantial increase from the current 5 per
cent penetration.
This growth is expected to be driven by strong
adoption (over 45 per cent) in both two-wheeler (2W) and three-wheeler
(3W) categories, with four-wheelers (cars) penetration projected to grow
to more than 20 per cent, according to a recent report by Bain &
Company and Blume Ventures.
Electric two-wheeler (E2W) sales
volume in India rose 17 per cent year-on-year in December as
electrification improved after a recent hiatus, said a BNP Paribas India
EV report last week.
In the E2W space, Ola Electric (Ola)
remained the market leader by volume and gained market share, reaching
40 per cent. Ola gained the most market share, followed by Bajaj Auto
while TVS Motor lost the most.
“Since its fall post the incentive
reduction on E2Ws, penetration has consistently improved and has likely
normalised to levels seen before subsidy cuts. The Bihar government
unveiled a new EV policy for the next five years,” said the report.