The Economic Times daily newspaper is available online now.

    India to open flagship EV making policy to lure global giants

    Synopsis

    India is preparing to open applications for its flagship EV policy, which offers reduced import duties to global electric vehicle manufacturers that commit to local production. Under the policy announced in March 2024, companies investing at least ₹41.5 billion (around $500 million) in a local plant within three years can import up to 8,000 EVs annually at a reduced 15% duty—down from 70%.

    An electric vehicle is driven on the road near India's Rashtrapati Bhavan Presidential Palace in New DelhiReuters
    India is set to open applications for its flagship policy offering lower import duties to global electric vehicle makers in exchange for manufacturing in India, people familiar with the matter said.

    The policy, that was announced in March 2024, offers to slash duty to 15% on any imported electric car priced from $35,000 if they invest at least 41.5 billion rupees, or about $500 million, to set up a local plant within three years. Up to 8,000 cars yearly can be imported at this reduced rate.

    Applications for this may open as early as this month and extend till March 15 next year, according to people familiar with the discussions who did not want to be named.

    Two Sharp with ET: Tesla skips Make in India | Will OPEC & Russia-Ukraine war drive oil prices up again?

    In this episode of Two Sharp with ET, Nisha Poddar breaks down two game-changing developments. OPEC+ has decided to hike oil production for the third straight month, despite Russia’s concerns. This comes at the backdrop of Russia and Ukraine warring against each other despite direct ceasefire talks in Istanbul. What does this mean for global trade, corporate forecasts, and the market mood? In another major India update, Elon Musk’s Tesla has yet again delayed its plans to enter the world’s largest auto market despite ramping up showroom search and hunting heads for roles since February this year.


    ALSO READ: Tesla not interested in manufacturing in India, minister says

    The third-largest Asian economy is seeking to lure EV makers like Elon Musk-led Tesla Inc., which is gearing up to start selling its cars to India after criticizing the country’s high duties regime for years. India is still a market hotspot for EVs while demand is mellowing in other parts of the world. The new policy, if it draws industry giants, will also intensify competition for local automakers who currently dominate the EV segment.

    While the broad outline is in line with what was announced last year, the people added that certain conditions have been tightened now with the Narendra Modi government to weed out non-serious players.

    India has increased financial eligibility, mandating minimum revenue requirement of 50 billion rupees in the fourth year and 75 billion rupees a year later for any applicant approved under the policy. Those falling short will face a penalty of up to 3% on the revenue gap.

    India’s Ministry of Heavy Industries did not immediately respond to an email seeking comments.


    (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)

    (Catch all the Business News, Breaking News, Budget 2025  Events and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.)

    Subscribe to The Economic Times Prime and read the ET ePaper online.

    ...more
    The Economic Times

    Stories you might be interested in

    OSZAR »