Mahindra & Mahindra placed its bets on electric mobility as early as 2007. A decade later, the move appears to be paying off
Mahesh Babu S, CEO, Mahindra Electric says India can become the second largest EV market in the world between 2030 and 2040
Image: Selvaprakash Lakshmanan for Forbes India
Mahesh Babu S is a sought-after man these days. In the last 2-3 months, the 46-year-old chief executive of Mahindra Electric Mobility has received a multitude of requests from startups that want to launch a mobility solutions venture using electric vehicles (EV). “Earlier, it was probably one request a month; now it is five to 10,” says Babu, whose company is a pioneer in the Indian EV space.
The heightened interest among startups looking to partner with Mahindra Electric—an arm of the $19-billion conglomerate, Mahindra and Mahindra (M&M)—isn’t surprising. It is logical considering the government has made up its mind to boost the adoption of EVs in the country through policy support (which opens up new entrepreneurial possibilities) and Mahindra Electric is a distinct first mover in this space.
The watershed moment for the future of EVs in India came in May 2017 when the government announced that it wants to ensure that all vehicles sold in India by 2030 would run on electricity, as opposed to the internal combustion engine-driven cars plying at present, which burn petrol and diesel. The rationale behind switching to EVs is the worsening air quality of top Indian cities, including the National Capital Region and Mumbai, as well as a rising import bill on account of crude.
The aggression with which the Indian government is promoting battery-powered EVs is evident from the deadline it has set, which is a decade earlier than the year by which Britain aims to make a similar shift.
“If the policy actions that are being contemplated materialise, India has the potential to become the second largest EV market in the world between 2030 and 2040,” says Babu, who has spent 19 years with M&M.
M&M chairman Anand Mahindra and its managing director Pawan Goenka had perhaps anticipated this inevitable shift towards newer and cleaner automotive technology in 2007. That was the year when M&M decided to acquire a majority stake in Bengaluru-based Reva Electric Car Co, a small-yet-ambitious EV company started by Chetan Maini, which rolled out its eponymous car in 2001.
Though EV sales in India have been subdued due to lack of charging infrastructure, high-cost batteries leading to expensive vehicles, and range anxiety (a concern on the part of an EV user that the battery will run out of charge before reaching a charging station), M&M persisted with its investments in Reva (which was first rebranded as Mahindra Reva Electric after the acquisition, and then Mahindra Electric in 2016). According to reports, Mahindra has committed close to $700 million for its EV project—which includes manufacturing vehicles, drivetrain and assembling battery packs—which is further to the carmaker’s goal of ensuring zero tailpipe emission in the country.
In FY17, Mahindra Electric sold 1,500 cars and it expects the figure to touch 2,000 by the end of FY18, according to Babu. Though the volumes aren’t significant yet (M&M sold 2,42,047 vehicles in the first half of the current fiscal), there is every indication that Mahindra is gearing up for a disproportionate rise in the number of EVs it sells in India going forward. “We expect volumes to pick up and I am confident that it is possible for us to achieve 5x growth in FY19,” Babu tells Forbes India.
n FY17, Mahindra Electric sold 1,500 cars and it expects the figure to touch 2,000 in the current fiscal
(This story appears in the 16 February, 2018 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)