EV business leaders want India to take more action

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EV businesses in India are seeking government support to meet a target for at least 65 percent of all new vehicle sales to be electric by 2030, according to a CEO-led organisation of major companies worldwide which is leading the push.

More than 25 companies, including automakers Mahindra & Mahindra and Volvo, oil giant Shell, and clean mobility startups, want India to set firm targets and frame policies to support the transition to electric vehicles (EVs), the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) said.

Indian bus maker JBM Group, motorcycle manufacturer Hero Electric, goods vehicle maker Switch Mobility, energy company Fortum, IKEA and LeasePlan are also backing the push.

This is the first collective push by companies in India to switch to clean mobility and comes weeks ahead of an United Nations’ climate change conference – seen as crucial to wringing out more commitments from governments to stop global warming.

India is the world’s third-biggest greenhouse gas emitter after China and the United States and so vital in the fight against climate change.

Meeting the 2030 target could provide an investment opportunity of about $200 billion, the WBCSD said in a statement, adding it would also cut India’s road transport emissions by 15 percent.

India has firmed up schemes to incentivise companies to build EVs and batteries locally to boost supply and complement a slew of federal and state benefits for EV buyers.

The WBCSD said that by 2030 companies want 30 percent of new cars, 70 percent of new motorbikes and scooters and 35 percent of new buses sold to be electric.

They want the government to legalise e-bike taxi services, give fleet permits for electric three-wheelers, ensure easy access to finance and leasing opportunities for electric cars and speed up installation of public chargers.

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