By David Fickling
Life moves pretty fast. That’s especially true in India’s booming cities.
A decade ago, the country’s iconic auto-rickshaws had three wheels and a diesel engine. Battery-powered versions existed, but only enough to be seen as a novelty and unregulated threat. Officially, just 12 e-rickshaws were sold nationwide in 2014.
How far we’ve come. The place where road transport is shifting most rapidly to battery power isn’t Oslo or Shenzhen, but Delhi. E-rickshaws took a 54 per cent share of India’s three-wheeler market last year, driven by zippy, longer-range models and running costs that are a fraction of petroleum-powered alternatives. Visiting the country last week, one of the first stops for Uber Technologies Inc. Chief Executive Officer Dara Khosrowshahi was to get behind the wheel of a Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. electric three-wheeler and promise an expansion into two- and three-wheeled ride-hailing.
Those betting India will come to the rescue of flailing global oil demand (it’s reckoned to be the biggest source of consumption growth between now and 2030, outstripping even China) need to reckon with how things are changing on the streets.
There’s no mystery why e-rickshaws have been taking over. Buy a Bajaj Maxima with an engine and you’ll pay about three rupees per kilometer (5.8 cents per mile) for diesel — a significant slice of earnings that average out around 10 rupees per kilometer. A Piaggio Ape E City with a lithium-ion battery charged at home, on the other hand, might cost just 0.27 rupees per kilometer. As a result, e-rickshaws aren’t just cleaner and quieter — they’re more profitable, too. That’s a decisive consideration for drivers who are usually rural migrants trying to get a foothold in the big city.
If this revolution was confined only to three-wheelers, it wouldn’t be much to get excited about. Auto-rickshaws are a highly distinctive part of India’s road fleet, but not a very significant one. Trucks and cars are sold in far greater numbers, while more than 70 per cent of vehicle sales are two-wheeled scooters and motorbikes.
However, the hard financial logic that’s caused e-rickshaws to take over is starting to play out on two wheels, too. Manufacturers are currently launching a slew of new models with price tags and performance to compete with conventional bikes and scooters that retail for less than 100,000 rupees ($1,200). With gasoline prices up about a third thanks to the rise in crude since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, that could spark a stampede like the one that transformed the e-rickshaw market. Only about 5% of two-wheelers sold last year were battery-powered. McKinsey & Co. forecasts that figure will hit 60 per cent to 70 per cent by 2030.
“The industry is going through a price war,” Swadesh Srivastava, the head of bike-maker Hero MotoCorp Ltd.’s emerging mobility unit, told an investor call Feb. 10. Hero’s main domestic two-wheeler rival TVS Motor Co. plans to offer models this year in every segment of the market, from premium to basic, and will expand its dealership network from 400 cities to 800 over the three months through March.
That could start to cause real pain for oil producers who’ve mostly shrugged off the e-rickshaw revolution. Only about 1.4 per cent of India’s gasoline and diesel is consumed by three-wheelers, but two-wheelers gulp down about 17 per cent of the total. The International Energy Agency’s latest estimates for the country’s oil demand are already being trimmed. Its latest report reckons 6.6 million barrels a day will be consumed in 2030 — above 5.5 million barrels last year, but well down from a central forecast of 6.8 million daily barrels in its global outlook last October.
The real prize lies beyond two wheels, however. The biggest polluters by far on India’s roads aren’t two- or three-wheelers but trucks, which consume nearly half of all gasoline and diesel. Trucks are normally seen as the hardest segment for EVs to crack. The biggest rigs are simply too energy-hungry to be powered by a battery. Even smaller ones are worked hard day and night for thin margins, making it difficult to spare the time to charge up their power packs.
Even here, though, the sands are shifting. Tata Motors Ltd. launched its first small electric truck in 2022 while Mahindra, the leading e-rickshaw producer, is planning to release a range in 2025. Truck owners, like rickshaw drivers, are intensely sensitive to the combined costs of purchase, refueling and maintenance — and manufacturers seem on the cusp of hitting their sweet spot.
Current e-trucks work out cheaper than diesel models once you’ve been operating them for five to seven years, Ashok Leyland Ltd. managing director Shenu Agarwal told investors Feb. 6. “If we can bring it down below five years, then it will start making much more sense,” he said.
In the US and Europe, the shift to electric vehicles was a top-down affair, best exemplified by Elon Musk’s 2006 promise to start by building an electric sports car and then use the profits to make progressively more affordable mass-market vehicles. Well-heeled drivers can’t get enough of luxury EVs like Porsche AG’s Taycan and Rolls-Royce’s Spectre, while the rest of us are waiting in vain for the sub-$30,000 city cars we were promised.
India seems to be moving in the opposite direction. Electrification of conventional cars and SUVs is still moving at a snail’s pace, with battery cars winning just a 2 per cent share of four-wheelers last year. That doesn’t matter much in a market that’s dominated by smaller vehicles and cost-conscious drivers. When the EV revolution arrives in India, it will come from the bottom up.