Key Points

India's EV sector grew 27% in FY24 but remains outside the top 10 globally, with just 2-3% market share in new car sales. Two-wheelers and three-wheelers dominate sales while Tata and Hyundai struggle to expand four-wheeler adoption. The country faces heavy reliance on Chinese battery imports despite discovering major lithium reserves in Jammu & Kashmir. Local refining projects like Lohum's facility aim to reduce dependence as India chases its 30% EV target by 2030.

Key Points: India EV Growth Trails Top 10 Nations Despite 27% YoY Rise

  • India ranks 11-12th globally in EV adoption
  • Two/three-wheelers drive 1.94M sales while 4-wheelers lag
  • 95% battery reliance on China, East Asia
  • Lithium reserves found in J&K, Karnataka boost local hopes
3 min read

India's EV growth is significantly lower than top 10 countries: Report

India's EV market grows 27% but lags behind global leaders, with only 2-3% new car sales despite Tata, Hyundai dominance.

"India's EV growth remains strong in absolute numbers but needs acceleration to reach tipping points - Intelsense Report"

New Delhi June 26

India's electric vehicle (EV) growth is significantly slower than the top 10 global standouts, according to a recent report by Intelsense.

As per the FY24 figure, the EV growth in India was 27 per cent (YoY), significantly slower than the top 10 global standouts. India's EV Market Share was about 2-3 per cent of new car sales in 2024, well below the 5 per cent average of the top 10 nations. However, the report adds, India although not in top 10 in terms of growth globally but it falls just outside the top 10, and is the fastest-growing major large market.

At current pace, India ranks 11-12th globally, trailing emerging leaders like Thailand, Vietnam, and Mexico.Penetration of EV remains significantly lower compared to top 10 nations, a factor that could hinder the country's aspiration of achieving a 30 per cent EV market share by 2030.

However, the reports also mention about the India is making strides towards its 2030 goal, with a steady increase in EV registrations and charging infrastructure.EV sales in India rose 27 per cent to reach 1.94 million units in 2024, mainly driven by two-wheelers and three-wheelers, which account for the bigger share of the market.In the four-wheeler segment and passenger vehicle, Tata Motors, Hyundai, Mahindra and MG are the top players in the Indian market. However, they have not met the expectations in terms of increased market share of new 4-wheelers along with EV infrastructure like battery and charging stations. Hero, Ola and TVS dominate the two-wheeler and three-wheeler segment in the EV sector.The report suggests that, India's growth in the EV sector remains strong in absolute numbers, but there is a need to accelerate more to reach tipping points.

One of the major problems faced by India is that there is about 95-100 per cent reliance on China and other East Asian countries like South Korea and Japan for critical EV battery materials.In order to deal with this, India is working towards the search of lithium Reserves. As of now, 5.9 million tonnes of lithium inferred in Reasi, J&K, which is one of the top 10 global reserves by quantity. There are Additional geological finds in Karnataka, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Jharkhand, and Rajasthan as well.

Additionally, there are various home grown Refining Projects such Lohum commissioned India's first battery-grade lithium refinery (1,000 tpa) in March 2025. Along with, Vardhaan Lithium partnering with Maharashtra govt to build a 60,000 tpa refinery near Nagpur (Butibori).

- ANI

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Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the EV growth article:
R
Rahul K.
We need more affordable EV options for middle-class families. Current prices are too high compared to petrol vehicles. Govt should increase subsidies and make financing easier. 🇮🇳
P
Priya M.
Good that we're finding lithium reserves in J&K! But why is infrastructure growth so slow? In Bangalore, I struggle to find charging stations. Companies should invest more in tier-2 cities too.
A
Amit S.
The 27% growth is actually decent considering our population and economic diversity. We can't compare directly with smaller nations like Thailand. Our two-wheeler EV growth is promising! 🛵
S
Sunita R.
Dependence on China for batteries is worrying. Hope the new lithium projects in J&K and Karnataka help reduce imports. Make in India should be priority for EV components too.
V
Vikram J.
Tata and Mahindra need to step up their game. Their EVs are good but too expensive. Where are the ₹10-15 lakh options? Meanwhile, Ola scooters are killing it in two-wheeler segment!
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Neha P.
The report misses our biggest challenge - electricity supply! Many areas still face power cuts. How will people charge EVs? First fix basic infrastructure, then push for EV revolution.

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