Maruti Suzuki India (MSIL) will start exporting its first ‘Made in
India’ electric cars to Japan and Europe by the end of this year and will then
launch for the domestic market by early 2025, R C Bhargava, Chairman, MSIL has
said..
“We will start (roll out) the electric vehicles (EVs) by the end of this
year. But the first lot of the EVs to be manufactured are going to be exported
both to Europe and Japan. Probably, we will start for domestic in 2025,”
Bhargava told businessline.
Maruti eVX
This will be the company’s first EV in the sports utility vehicle (SUV)
segment and is code named eVX. MSIL had revealed the concept electric SUV eVX
in the Auto Expo last year, showcasing MSIL’s plans towards electric mobility
in India.
The vehicle is designed and developed by Suzuki
Motor Corporation (Japan), underpinned by a ground-up all-electric platform
that will spawn a range of future EVs.
Suzuki Motor Corporation (SMC) has committed ?10,000 crore investment
for production of battery electric vehicle (BEVs) and batteries in India over
the next six-seven years and will launch
six EVs by 2030.
“To provide a full range of products and services, Suzuki will provide
not only battery EVs but also carbon neutral internal combustion engine (ICE)
vehicles that use CNG, biogas, and ethanol mixed fuels,” SMC said in a
statement in January 2023.
Talking about challenges around EVs, whether it is charging infrastructure
or range anxiety or cost, he said: “EVs have a place, we will get into EVs. I
think EV technology will also change...just now there are many ssues around EVs
globally, not India (yet) and one of the major issue is of parking, not all
have their own garages.”
He said several cars are still parked on the roadside of the residential
areas or on open spaces, so putting up chargers in such places is not feasible,
and people can’t visit public charging stations every time they require their
EVs require charging.
Hence, the country should also promote vehicles which are run on
alternative fuels. “India has
alternative fuels which are cleaner like bio-fuels, totally renewable and some
of it is even carbon negative, and if you use all the wastes, you would
actually clean the country also. India would become a cleaner country,”
Bhargava added.