• Total Cost Of Ownership
  • TCA
  • Production Linked Incentive
  • EVs
  • Report
  • PLI
March 01, 2022

Subsidy traction

Charting the EV trajectory beyond FAME regime

What happens to EV growth once subsidy ends?

 

Penetration of electric vehicles (EVs) in India has been largely driven by subsidies, especially the Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Hybrid and Electric Vehicle, or FAME, scheme under the National Electric Mobility Mission Plan, and subsidies offered by various states.

 

These sops have bridged the gap between the purchasing cost of a traditional, internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicle and that of an EV. From 60-65% of total outlay under FAME I, the incentives have risen to ~85% under FAME II. Once they exhaust — likely by fiscal 2024 — the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme could drive EV adoption.

 

Rise in bank NPAs to be muted due to various dispensations

 

Over the past five fiscals, subsidies have accelerated EV sales rapidly (more than ~20% on-year growth in most segments), on a low base of fiscal 2017 and despite the pandemic.

 

Adoption of electric two-wheelers has been strong — a trend that’s likely to continue — due to better cost economics, availability of multiple models, and feasibility of home-charging options (see chart below).