FAME Alone Not Enough to Boost EV Adoption

FAME Alone Not Enough to Boost EV Adoption

FAME alone is not enough to reach the 2030 target, various measures as prerequisites are needed in this transition.

FAME EV Transition

Policies like FAME need to be supplemented with measures such as domestic manufacturing of vehicles, batteries, and components to boost mass adoption of electric vehicles by 2030, industry body Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) has said. 

Quoting a study by the Centre, the chamber said India can save 64 percent of anticipated road-based mobility-related energy demand and 37 percent of carbon emissions in 2030 by pursuing a shared, electric, and connected mobility future. 

Measures like market creation and adoption, domestic manufacturing of vehicles, components and batteries, strategic sourcing of key raw material and skill development in India are needed to support policies like FAME to embrace mass adoption of electric vehicles by 2030, it said.

This would result in a reduction of 156 million tonnes of oil equivalent in diesel and petrol consumption in 2030 and a net saving of approximately USD 60 billion in 2030 at present oil prices.  Which also aligns with India’s vision of reducing oil imports by 10 percent by 2022.

Transport continues to be the highest oil consuming sector and the use of diesel and petrol grew at 5.9 percent and 9.9 percent respectively in the last 10 years. As per government’s estimates, the country’s import dependency on oil has increased from 78.3 percent of total consumption in 2014-15 to settling at a new high of 83.7 percent in the 10-month period of FY2018-19, the chamber said. 

“Effectively managing energy use with growth and reducing India’s oil intensity; developing high-grade energy infrastructure; ensuring an environmentally sustainable future and promotion of clean air and electric vehicles have been carved out as key work areas for CII this year,” CII President Vikram Kirloskar said. 

With an eye on promoting electric and hybrid vehicles, the Union Cabinet recently cleared a Rs 10,000-crore programme under the second phase of the FAME scheme. The scheme is being implemented over a period of three years and will come in to effect on April 1, 2019, when the extension period for the first phase ends. 

However, with EV penetration in India currently at just 1 percent, FAME alone is not enough to reach the 2030 target, CII said, suggesting various measures as prerequisites in this transition. For transport to go truly green, it must also be accompanied by a rising share of renewables along with environmentally sustainable batteries, it added. 

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Ayush Verma

Ayush is a staff writer at saurenergy.com and writes on renewable energy with a special focus on solar and wind. Prior to this, as an engineering graduate trying to find his niche in the energy journalism segment, he worked as a correspondent for iamrenew.com.

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