When it comes to Indian consumers, utility trumps novelty. However, it's not all number crunching and utilitarian logic, as far as the Indian EV buyer is concerned. Storyboard18 decodes the Indian EV consumer
“Once you try an EV, it’s hard to go back to internal combustion,” says Arun Vinayak, founder of Exponent Energy, a Bengaluru-based maker of battery packs and battery management systems. Vinayak’s statement might seem biased and possibly invite the ire of many-a-petrolhead but is objectively hard to argue with.
Electric vehicles deliver torque instantaneously, have far fewer components than an internal combustion vehicle, and therefore, experience far less wear and tear. They’re silent and swift and capable of being constantly updated via easy-to-download software upgrades. They’re the future.
The EV segment has witnessed immense growth in the last two years alone. The last financial quarter alone revealed a cumulative growth of 668 percent across two, three, and four-wheeled electric vehicles (according to Federation of Automobile Dealers Associations data). Experts suggest that the first adopters of EVs were drawn to the technology for a multitude of reasons. According to Bertrand D’Souza, Editor-in-Chief of Overdrive, consumers do wish to contribute towards sustainability, although high costs of petrol and diesel are a major reason for the shift to EVs. “People also want to drive what few other people own.”
According to Hormazd Sorabjee, Editor-in-Chief of Autocar India, however, the average EV consumer has always been buoyed by financial incentives as EVs, for the first time, present a viable alternative to the rising cost of petrol and diesel. Environmental considerations rarely, if ever, come into the picture. “95 percent are concerned about their wallets rather than saving the planet”
Even though EV startups like Ather Energy began building an EV brand in 2013, with both its cofounders fresh out of IIT, it wasn’t until four years ago that the technology became a viable mobility solution. “Back in 2014, it was more of an urban mobility toy,” says Vinayak who formerly served as the Chief Product Officer at Ather Energy. “Now when people are looking for a product that’s efficient, well built, well designed, EVs have made it to the choice list, across the price spectrum,” he adds. Sorabjee seconds that notion, citing low running costs and ease of use as the chief preference for early adopters. “EV adopters are ready to embrace the technology as the future.”