Tata Motors expects to increase the annual production of its electric vehicles to more than 80,000 units, as reported by Reuters.
In the next one year, Tata Motors expects to aggressively ramp up annual production of electric vehicles (EVs) to more than 80,000 units, sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters. That compares with the 19,000 EVs it built and sold last year.
Tata, India’s biggest automaker, declined to comment on production plans but said EV sales were growing rapidly with demand outpacing supply. The sources were not authorised to speak to the media and declined to be identified.
Last year Tata announced its plan to launch 10 EV models by March 2026, investing about $2 billion in new vehicle architecture, related technology, and infrastructure. Tata accounts for 90 percent of India’s EV sales – a segment that still only represents 1 percent of the country’s annual sales of about 3 million vehicles.
On April 29, Tata will unveil a concept car that it plans to build on its first EV platform developed from the ground up. Cars built on this platform, called the Pure EV architecture, will also be launched in global markets, the company said in its invitations to the unveiling.
The new platform represents the third phase of Tata’s electrification plans that have been given a boost by a $1 billion investment from private equity firm TPG last year. The first phase was the launching of two EVs, the Nexon SUV and another model for fleets, which are being built using an existing combustion engine platform.
The second phase calls for modifying a combustion engine platform to build EVs with bigger batteries and longer driving ranges. Those cars are expected to hit the market in about two years.
Rolling out more electric vehicles is a cornerstone of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s carbon reduction agenda, and his administration is offering companies billions of dollars in incentives to build electric cars and their components locally.
By 2030, India wants electric models to make up 30 percent of total car sales.
(With inputs from Reuters)