11/26/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 11/27/2024 18:15
Guest Post by Nitish Arora and Sahana L of NRDC India
The World Sustainable Transport Day, November 26, highlights the importance of collective efforts to build cleaner, more efficient transportation systems. India, as the world's third largest automobile market, is on a journey to transform its transportation sector, with a major goal to transition to electric vehicles (EVs). While initiatives like demand incentives and localized manufacturing programs have spurred the initial adoption of EVs, sustaining and accelerating this transition could require a renewed focus on overcoming supply-side challenges and building an inclusive ecosystem.
India's Strategies to Drive EV Adoption
India has employed a range of strategies to grow EV uptake-from incentives to drive EV adoption to setting up a localized EV ecosystem. Both national and sub-national governments have introduced a mix of fiscal and non-fiscal incentives to promote EV adoption, supported localization through phased manufacturing programs, and implemented production-linked incentive (PLI) schemes to strengthen the domestic EV supply chain. To complement these efforts, measures like transitioning to Bharat Stage VI standards have been introduced to improve the efficiency of internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles.
As a result of these initiatives, India has made notable progress, with EV sales exceeding 1.5 million units in the last fiscal year. However, this figure still represents just 6.3% of total vehicle sales, which stood at approximately 24 million during the same period. While current policies and incentives are projected to enable 30-35% electrification of new vehicle sales by 2030, the International Energy Agency's 2023 report highlights the need for at least 50% EV adoption within the next decade to stay on track for the nation's 2070 net-zero target.
The slow adoption of EVs can largely be attributed to higher upfront costs, a limited variety of EV models that match the performance of internal combustion engine vehicles, and a lack of widespread public charging infrastructure. To truly accelerate India's EV transition, addressing these challenges and ramping up supply-side efforts will be critical.
The Potential of Supply-Side Interventions
Globally, the discourse around EV policies is evolving. For years, countries have primarily relied on demand-side policies to stimulate electric vehicle adoption, offering subsidies and incentives to bolster demand. While these measures have helped kickstart the transition, they place a significant burden on government finances and fail to provide long-term market certainty for industry players. This underscores a critical reality: demand-side policies alone are insufficient to achieve the transformative inflection point needed for a full-scale transition to electric mobility.
Global Evidence for Effectiveness of Supply-Side Interventions
The global shift toward supply-side interventions to accelerate the sales and production of zero-emission vehicles (ZEVs) has been significant. Supply side interventions can be broadly categorized into two types: performance-based standards (e.g., emission and fuel consumption standards) and sales/production-linked ZEV targets. Countries have been increasingly utilizing both these types of policy instruments. In 2021, 22 countries had established electrification targets for new vehicle sales or vehicle stock, alongside bans on ICE vehicles. Additionally, eight countries and the European Union (EU) pledged net-zero emissions. By 2023, this number increased to 29 countries with defined electrification targets or ICE vehicle bans.
Figure 1. Global ZEV mandates & prohibitions on ICE Vehicles - 2023
As shown in Figure 1, 11 countries and the EU have committed to achieving 100% ZEV sales across various vehicle categories by 2035. While demand incentives for EV purchases remain, the focus has shifted towards building robust charging infrastructure and setting ambitious ZEV targets to support long-term growth.
Globally, more direct supply-side policy instruments have been deployed to chart a clear growth path for the EV industry. These include phased targets to phase out ICE vehicles, quotas for zero-emission vehicle production and sales, stricter emission regulations like CO₂ limits and fuel economy standards and integrating EV ecosystems into carbon markets and ESG frameworks to incentivize OEMs' electrification efforts.
How Supply Side Interventions Drive Industry and Market Transformation
Figure 2: Electric vehicle sales shares of new vehicles and model availability in U.S. states and the District of Columbia, 2023
Figure 3: BEV & PHEV sales shares in California, other ZEV states, and non-ZEV states, 2023
Figure 4: Share of BEV registrations in EU and China with implementation of supply side interventions
Transport & Environment, EV Market Reports
Figure 5: Domestic jobs created by ACC II adoption in the United States and California
Transitioning to Supply-Side Interventions for a Sustainable EV Future
Countries leading in EV adoption have shown that complementing demand-side incentives with supply-side interventions not only sustains market growth but also accelerates adoption rates, even after demand incentives are phased out. 28 Indian states and union territories have notified EV policies-27 of which include EV market share targets. If implemented, additional supply-side measures would help to provide market certainty, improve ZEV model availability, and enhance affordability.