Automotive industry in India
Automotive industry in India
History
In 1897, the first car ran on an Indian road. Through the 1930s, cars were imports only, and in small numbers.
An embryonic automotive industry emerged in India in the 1940s. Hindustan Motors was launched in 1942, long-time competitor Premier in 1944, building Chrysler, Dodge, and Fiat products respectively.[3] Mahindra & Mahindra was established by two brothers in 1945, and began assembly of Jeep CJ-3A utility vehicles. Following independence in 1947, the Government of India and the private sector launched efforts to create an automotive-component manufacturing industry to supply to the automobile industry. In 1953, an import substitution programme was launched, and the import of fully built-up cars began to be restricted.[3]
1947-1970
The 1952 Tariff Commission
In 1952, the government appointed the first Tariff Commission, one of whose purposes was to come out with a feasibility plan for the indigenization of the Indian automobile industry. In 1953, the commission submitted their report, which recommended categorizing existing Indian car companies according to their manufacturing infrastructure, with licensed capacity to manufacture a certain number of vehicles, with capacity increases allowable, as per demands, in the future. The Tariff Commission recommendations were implemented with new policies that would eventually exclude companies that only imported parts for assembly, as well as those with no Indian partner. In 1954, following the Tariff Commission implementation, General Motors, Ford, and Rootes Group, which had assembly-only plants in Mumbai, decided to move out of India.[4]
The Tariff commission policies, including similar restrictions that applied to other industries, came to be known as the "license raj", which proved to be the greatest undoing of the Indian automotive industry, where bureaucratic red tape ended up causing demand to outstrip supply, with month-long waiting periods for cars, scooters, and motorcycles.
Passenger Cars
Hindustan Motors, Calcutta – technical collaboration with Morris Motors to manufacture Morris Oxford models that would later become HM Ambassador.
Addisons, Madras – An Amalgamations Group company, was the agent for Nuffield's Morris, Wolseley, and Riley cars, and Chrysler's Plymouth, Dodge, and De Soto cars and trucks. The first Morris Minor assembled in India and the first car assembled in Madras was driven out from Addison's twin-plants on Smith Road by Anantharamakrishnan on 15 November 1950.[5]
Premier Automobiles, Bombay – technical collaboration with Chrysler to manufacture Dodge, Plymouth and Desoto models and with Fiat to manufacture the 1100D models which would later with Premier Padmini range.
Standard Motor Products of India, Madras – technical collaboration from Standard-Triumph to manufacture Standard Vanguard, Standard 8, 10 and later Standard Herald.
Utility and Light Commercial Vehicles
Vehicle Factory Jabalpur – started manufacturing Jonga Light Utility Vehicles and Vahan 1 Ton (Nissan 4W73 Carriers) in India, under license from Nissan of Japan. They were the main troop carriers of the Indian Armed Forces and much powerful than any other vehicle of their class.
Mahindra & Mahindra, Bombay – technical collaboration with Willys to manufacture CJ Series Jeep.
Bajaj Tempo, Pune, now Force Motors – technical collaboration with Tempo (company) to manufacture Tempo Hanseat, a three-wheeler and Tempo Viking and Hanomag, later known as Tempo Matador in India.
Standard Motor Products of India – technical collaboration from Standard has licence to manufacture the Standard Atlas passenger van with panel van and one-tonne one tonne pickup variants.
Medium and Heavy Commercial Vehicles
Vehicle Factory Jabalpur – started manufacturing Shaktiman trucks with technical assistance from MAN SE of Germany. The trucks were the main logistics vehicle of the Indian Army with several specialist variants. VFJ still is the sole supplier of B vehicles to the Indian Armed Forces.
Heavy Vehicles Factory – was established in 1965 in Avadi, Chennai to produce tanks in India. Since its inception, HVF has produced all the tanks of India, including Vijayanta, Arjun, Ajeya, Bhishma and their variants for the Indian Army. HVF is the only tank manufacturing facility of India.
Tata Motors, Pune, then known as TELCO – technical collaboration with Mercedes Benz to manufacture medium to heavy commercial vehicles both Bus and Trucks.
Ashok Motors, later Ashok Leyland, Madras – technical collaboration with Leyland Motors to manufacture medium to heavy commercial vehicles both Bus and Trucks. Ashok Motors also discontinued its Austin venture formed in 1948 to sell Austin A40 and retooled the factory to make trucks and buses.
Hindustan Motors – technical collaboration with General Motors to manufacture the Bedford range of medium lorry and bus chassis.
Premier Automobiles – technical collaboration with Chrysler to manufacture the Dodge, Fargo range of medium lorry, panel vans, mini-bus and bus chassis.
Simpsons & Co, Madras – part of Amalgamations Group (TAFE Tractors) – technical collaboration with Ford to manufacture medium lorry and bus chassis, but did not utilise that option until the 1980s.
Scooters, Mopeds and Motorcycles
known as Bajaj Chetak, by Bajaj became the largest sold scooter in the world
Many of the two-wheelers manufacturers were granted licenses in the early 1960s, well after the tariff commission was enabled.
Royal Enfield (India), Madras – technical collaboration with Royal Enfield, UK to manufacture the Enfield Bullet range of motorcycles.
Bajaj Auto, Poona – technical collaboration with Piaggio, Italy to manufacture their best selling Vespa range of scooters and three wheelers with commercial option as well.
Automobile Products of India, Bombay (Better known for API Lambretta – technical collaboration with Innocenti of Milan, Italy to manufacture their Lambretta range of mopeds, scooters and three-wheelers. This company was actually the Rootes Group car plant that was bought over by M. A. Chidambaram family.
Mopeds India Limited, Tirupathi – technical collaboration with Motobécane, France to manufacture their best selling Mobylette mopeds.
Escorts Group, New Delhi – technical collaboration with CEKOP of Poland to manufacture the Rajdoot 175 motorcycle whose origin was DKW RT 125
Ideal Jawa, Mysore – in technical collaboration with CZ - Jawa of Czechoslovakia for its Jawa and Yezdi range of motorcycles.
1970 to 1983
However, growth was relatively slow in the 1950s and 1960s, due to nationalisation and the license raj, which hampered the growth of the Indian private sector.
The beginning of the 1970s saw some growth potential; and most of the collaboration license agreements came to an end, but with the option to continue manufacturing with renewed branding. Cars were still meant for the elite and Jeeps were largely used by government organizations and in some rural regions. By the end of the decade, some developments were made in commercial vehicle segments to facilitate the movement of goods. The two-wheeler segment remained unchanged except for to increased sales to the middle class in urban areas. There was emphasis on having more farm tractors, as India was embarking on a new Green Revolution; and Russian and eastern bloc imports were brought in to meet the demand.
But after 1970, with restrictions on the import of vehicles set, the automotive industry started to grow; but the growth was mainly driven by tractors, commercial vehicles and scooters. Cars still remained a major luxury item. In the 1970s, price controls were finally lifted, inserting a competitive element into the automobile market.[6] However, by the 1980s, the automobile market was still dominated by Hindustan and Premier, who sold superannuated products in fairly limited numbers.[7] During the eighties, a few competitors began to arrive on the scene.
The OPEC oil crisis saw increase need to installing or redesign some vehicle to fit diesel engines on medium commercial vehicle. Until the early 1970s Mahindra Jeeps were on Petrol and Premier commercial vehicles had Petrol model options. The Defence sector too had most trucks on Petrol engines.
1984 to 1992
From the end of the 1970s to the beginning of the 1980s saw no new models but the country continued with 2 decade old designs forcing government to encourage and let more manufacturers into fray.
In 1984, the then Prime Minister of India, Indira Gandhi established the Ordnance Factory Medak, near Hyderabad. It started manufacturing Infantry Combat Vehicles christened as Sarath, the backbone of India's mechanised infantry. OFMK is still the only manufacturing facility of ICVs in India. To manufacture the high-power engines used in ICVs and main battle tanks, Engine Factory Avadi, near Chennai was set in 1987. In 1986, to promote the auto industry, the government established the Delhi Auto Expo. The 1986 Expo was a showcase for how the Indian automotive industry was absorbing new technologies, promoting indigenous research and development, and adapting these technologies for the rugged conditions of India. The nine-day show was attended by then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.
Post-1992 liberalisation
Eventually multinational automakers, such as, Suzuki and Toyota of Japan and Hyundai of South Korea, were allowed to invest in the Indian market, furthering the establishment of an automotive industry in India. Maruti Suzuki was the first, and the most successful of these new entries, and in part the result of government policies to promote the automotive industry beginning in the 1980s.[7] As India began to liberalise its automobile market in 1991, a number of foreign firms also initiated joint ventures with existing Indian companies. The variety of options available to the consumer began to multiply in the nineties, whereas before there had usually only been one option in each price class. By 2000, there were 12 large automotive companies in the Indian market, most of them offshoots of global companies.[8]
Slow export growth
Exports were slow to grow. Sales of small numbers of vehicles to tertiary markets and neighbouring countries began early, and in 1987 Maruti Suzuki shipped 480 cars to Europe (Hungary). After some growth in the mid-nineties, exports once again began to drop as the outmoded platforms provided to Indian manufacturers by multinationals were not competitive.[9] This was not to last, and today India manufactures low-priced cars for markets across the globe. As of 18 March 2013, global brands such as Proton Holdings, PSA Group, Kia, Mazda, Chrysler, Dodge and Geely Holding Group were shelving plans for India due to the competitiveness of the market, as well as the global economic crisis.[10]
Emission norms
In 2000, in line with international standards to reduce vehicular pollution, the central government unveiled standards titled "India 2000", with later, upgraded guidelines to be known as Bharat Stage emission standards. These standards are quite similar to the stringent European emission standards and have been implemented in a phased manner. Bharat Stage IV (BS-IV), the most stringent so far, was implemented first, in April 2010, in 13 cities—Delhi (NCR), Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Pune, Surat, Kanpur, Lucknow, Solapur, and Agra—and then, as of April 2017, the rest of the nation.
Local manufacture encouraged
India levies an import tax of 125% on foreign imported cars, while the import tax on components such as gearboxes, airbags, drive axles, is 10%. Therefore, the taxes encourage cars to be assembled in India rather than be imported as completely built units.[11]
Size
As of 2019, India is the 4th largest automobile market in the world, surpassing Germany in terms of sales.[12]
Indian auto market [13] was hit by a large drop in july 2019, registering 201.827 units (-30.2%). Maruti the leader holding 47.8% of share, declined 36.7%. The negative trends was held by the entire top 10, except for Volkswagen, which improved by 2.2%.
Manufacturing facilities
The majority of India's car manufacturing industry is evenly divided into three "clusters". Around Chennai is the southernmost and largest, with a 35% revenue share, accounting for 60% of the country's automotive exports, and home of the operations of Heavy Vehicles Factory, Engine Factory Avadi, Ford, Hyundai, Renault, Mitsubishi, Nissan, BMW, Hindustan Motors, Daimler, Caparo, Mini, and Datsun.[14][15]
Near Mumbai, Maharashtra, along the Chakan corridor near Pune, is the western cluster, with a 33% share of the market. Audi, Volkswagen, and Skoda are located in Aurangabad. Mahindra and Mahindra has an SUV and engine assembly plant at Nashik. General Motors, Tata Motors, Mercedes Benz, Land Rover, Jaguar, Fiat, and Force Motors have assembly plants in the area.[16][17]
Andhra Pradesh
- Commercial and passenger vehicles
Isuzu Motors India, in Sri City
Kia Motors India, in Penukonda
Ashok Leyland, in Krishna district
- Two wheelers
Hero MotoCorp, in Satyavedu
- Off-highway vehicles
Kobelco Cranes, in Sricity
Himachal Pradesh
- Two wheelers
TVS Motor – Nalagarh[32]
- Passenger vehicles
ICML motors – Amb[33]
- Commercial vehicles
TAFE Tractors – Parwanoo[34]
Karnataka
- Two wheelers
- Passenger vehicles
- Commercial vehicles
Bharat Earth Movers - Bengaluru
Scania Commercial Vehicles India Private Limited – Bengaluru[37]
TAFE Tractors – Doddaballapur[34]
Tata Motors – Dharwad[23]
Bharat Earth Movers - Mysuru
Volvo India Volvo Buses India – Hosakote[38] Volvo Trucks India – Hosakote[39] Volvo Construction Equipment India – Hosakote[40]
Kerala
- Commercial vehicles
Bharat Earth Movers Defense Products - produces Tatra Trucks 12x12, 10x10,8x8, 6x6, 4x4, and variants
Kerala Automobiles Limited
Maharashtra
- Two wheelers
- Passenger vehicles
Mahindra & Mahindra Automotive Division – Nashik, Chakan (Pune)[49][50]
Ssangyong Motor Company – Chakan (Pune)[51]
Tata Motors Limited Tata Motors – Pimpri Chinchwad (Pune)[52] Jaguar Cars – Pimpri Chinchwad (Pune) Pune[53] Land Rover - Pimpri Chinchwad, (Pune).
Mercedes-Benz Passenger Cars – Chakan (Pune)[54]
Fiat Automobiles – Ranjangaon (Pune)[55]
Jeep India – Ranjangaon (Pune)
General Motors India – Talegaon (Pune)[56]
Volkswagen Group Sales India Private Limited (Pune) Volkswagen – Chakan (Pune)[57] Skoda Auto - Chakan (Pune), Audi AG – Shendra, Aurangabad[58] Škoda Auto – Shendra, Aurangabad[59]
Chinkara Motors – Karlekhind, Alibag[60]
Premier Automobiles Limited – Pimpri Chinchwad (Pune)[61]
- Commercial vehicles
Ashok Leyland – Bhandara[62]
Bajaj Auto (Pune) – Waluj, Aurangabad[46]
Force Motors – Chakan (Pune)[63]
Mahindra Navistar – Chakan, (Pune)[64]
MAN Trucks India – Akurdi (Pune)[65]
Piaggio Vehicles – Baramati (Pune)[66]
Premier Automobiles Limited – Pimpri Chinchwad (Pune)[61]
Eicher (VE Commercial Vehicles Ltd.) – Thane.
Sany India – (Pune).
Hyundai Construction Equipment – Chakan (Pune).
Terex – Khed (Pune).
Caterpillar - Banda, Sindhudurg.
John Deere Tractors – Sanaswadi (Pune).
Punjab
- Commercial vehicles
SML Isuzu Limited – Nawanshahar[67] (originally a Swaraj Mazda plant).
Swaraj Tractors, Mohali.
Sonalika Tractor Pvt Ltd, Hoshiarpur.
Preet Tractor, Nabha.
Standard Tractors, Barnala.
Rajasthan
- Two Wheelers
Honda Motorcycle & Scooter India – Tapukara[27] Hero Motocorp;Neemrana
- Passenger vehicles
Honda Cars India Ltd. – Tapukara[68]
- Commercial vehicles
Tamil Nadu
- Two wheelers
- Passenger vehicles
- Commercial vehicles
Telangana
- Defence
Ordnance Factory Medak, Medak
- Commercial vehicles
Mahindra and Mahindra, Zaheerabad
Deccan auto Limited, Patancheru
Uttar Pradesh
- Two wheelers
India Yamaha Motor – Greater Noida[79]
LML – Kanpur
- Passenger vehicles
- Commercial vehicles
Tata Motors – Lucknow
New Holland – Greater Noida
Uttarakhand
- Commercial vehicles
Ashok Leyland – Pantnagar
Tata Motors – Pantnagar
Mahindra & Mahindra – Haridwar
- Two wheelers
Hero MotoCorp – Haridwar
Bajaj Auto – Pantnagar
West Bengal
- Passenger vehicles
Hindustan Motors Limited – Kolkata (Inactive)
- Commercial vehicles
Tata Hitachi Construction Machinery – Kharagpur
Exports
India's automobile exports have grown consistently and reached $4.5 billion in 2009, with the United Kingdom being India's largest export market, followed by Italy, Germany, Netherlands, and South Africa.[82]
According to The New York Times, India's strong engineering base and expertise in the manufacturing of low-cost, fuel-efficient cars has resulted in the expansion of manufacturing facilities of several automobile companies like Hyundai, Nissan, Toyota, Volkswagen, and Maruti Suzuki.[83]
In 2008, South Korean multinational Hyundai Motors alone exported 240,000 cars made in India. Nissan Motors plannned to export 250,000 vehicles manufactured in its India plant by 2011.[84] Similarly, US automobile company, General Motors had announced its plans to export about 50,000 cars manufactured in India by 2011.[85]
In September 2009, Ford Motors announced its plans to set up a plant in India with an annual capacity of 250,000 cars, for US$500 million. The cars were manufactured both for the Indian market and for export.[86] The company said that the plant was a part of its plan to make India the hub for its global production business.[87] Fiat Motors had announced that it would source more than US$1 billion worth auto components from India.[88]
In 2009 India (0.23m) surpassed China (0.16m) as Asia's fourth largest exporter of cars after Japan (1.77m), Korea (1.12m) and Thailand (0.26m).[89]
In July 2010, The Economic Times reported that PSA Peugeot Citroën was planning to re-enter the Indian market and open a production plant in Andhra Pradesh that would have an annual capacity of 100,000 vehicles, investing € 700M in the operation.[90] PSA's intention to utilise this production facility for export purposes however remains unclear as of December 2010.
In recent years, India has emerged as a leading center for the manufacture of small cars. Hyundai, the biggest exporter from the country, now ships more than 250,000 cars annually from India. Apart from Maruti Exports' shipments to Suzuki's other markets, Maruti Suzuki also manufactures small cars for Nissan, which sells them in Europe. Nissan will also export small cars from its new Indian assembly line. Tata Motors exports its passenger vehicles to Asian and African markets, and is preparing to sell electric cars in Europe in 2010. The firm is planning to sell an electric version of its affordable car the Tata Nano in Europe and in the U.S. In the 2000s, Mahindra & Mahindra prepared to introduce its pickup trucks and small SUV models in the U.S. market, but canceled its plans. As of 2019, it is assembling and selling an off-road vehicle (Mahindra Roxor; not certified for road use) in limited numbers in the U.S.[91] It is also sold in Canada. Bajaj Auto is designing a low-cost car for Renault Nissan Automotive India, which will market the product worldwide. Renault Nissan may also join domestic commercial vehicle manufacturer Ashok Leyland in another small car project.[92] While the possibilities for the Indian automobile industry are impressive, there are challenges that could thwart future growth. Since the demand for automobiles in recent years is directly linked to overall economic expansion and rising personal incomes, industry growth will slow if the economy weakens.[92]
Top 10 export destinations
India exported $14.5 billion worth of automobiles in 2014. The 10 countries below imported 47.8% of that total.[93]
Rank | Country | Value (US$) | Share |
---|---|---|---|
1 | United States | 1.2 billion | 8.4% |
2 | Mexico | $1 billion | 6.9% |
3 | South Africa | $888.8 million | 6.1% |
4 | United Kingdom | $637.4 million | 4.4% |
5 | Sri Lanka | $596.9 million | 4.1% |
6 | Bangladesh | $592.1 million | 4.1% |
7 | Turkey | $580.4 million | 4% |
8 | Nigeria | $546.8 million | 3.8% |
9 | United Arab Emirates | $433.6 million | 3% |
10 | Colombia | $428.9 million | 3% |
Passenger vehicles in India
This list is of cars that are officially available and serviced in India. While other cars can be imported to the country at a steep 105% import duty, car-makers such as Alfa Romeo,[96] McLaren,[97] Pagani,[98] Cadillac,[99] SSC,[100] Zenvo,[101] SEAT,[102] Smart,[103] Daihatsu,[104] Infiniti,[105] Acura,[106] Spyker,[107] Lotus,[108] Ariel,[109] Caterham,[110] Peugeot-Citroën,[111] Mazda,[112] Kia,[113] GAZ,[114] and Proton[115] are in various stages of official introduction into the Indian automobile industry.
Indian automotive companies
Models currently manufactured by Indian companies
Force Motors (earlier known as Tempo): One
Hindustan Motors:[116] Ambassador
Mahindra:[120]Bolero, Scorpio, Thar, Xylo, Quanto, Verito, Verito Vibe, Genio, XUV500, e2o, TUV300, KUV100, NuvoSport, Marazzo.
Premier Automobiles Limited:[121] Sigma, RiO
San Motors:[122] Storm
Maruti Suzuki (subsidiary of Japanese auto maker Suzuki)[123][124] Alto K10, Alto 800, WagonR, Swift, DZire, Eeco, Ertiga, Celerio, Ciaz, Vitara Brezza, Baleno, Ignis, S-Cross, XL6.
Tata Motors:[125] Nano, Sumo, Movus, Venture, Safari, Xenon, Zest, Bolt, Tiago, Tigor, Hexa, Nexon, Harrier.
Defunct Indian automotive companies
Sipani Automobiles
Standard Motor Products of India
Foreign automotive companies in India
Hyundai, Renault, Nissan, Datsun, Mitsubishi, Ford, Fiat, Honda, Toyota, Volkswagen, Skoda, Audi, Jaguar, Land Rover, Mercedes-Benz, BMW and MINI are the foreign automotive companies that manufacture and market their products in India.
Vehicles currently manufactured in India
BMW India:[126] 1 Series, 3 Series, 3 Series GT, 5 Series, 7 Series, X1, X3, X4, X5.
Datsun: Go, Go+, Redi-Go
Fiat India: Punto, Linea, Avventura, Urban Cross.
Ford India:[127] Figo, Figo Aspire, Freestyle, Ecosport, Endeavour.
Honda Cars India Limited:[128] Jazz, Amaze, BR-V, City, WR-V, Civic, CR-V.
Hyundai Motor India:[129] Eon, i10, i20, Xcent, Verna, Elantra, Creta, Tucson, Venue.
Jeep India: Compass.
Kia: Seltos.
MG: Hector.
Land Rover (Subsidiary of Tata Motors):[133] Discovery Sport, Range Rover Evoque.
Mercedes-Benz India:[134] A-Class, C-Class, E-Class, GLA-Class, GLE-Class, GLC-Class, S-Class.
MINI:[135] Countryman.
Mitsubishi[136] (in collaboration with Hindustan Motors):[137]Pajero.
Nissan Motor India:[138] Micra, Sunny, Terrano, Kicks.
Renault India:[139][140][141] Captur, Duster, Kwid, Lodgy, Triber.
Toyota Kirloskar:[144] Etios Liva, Etios, Corolla Altis, Innova Crysta, Fortuner, Camry, Yaris, Glanza.
Volkswagen India:[145][146] Polo, Vento, Ameo, Tiguan, Passat.
Opel was present in India until 2006. As of 2013, Opel only provides spare parts and vehicle servicing to existing Opel vehicle owners.
General Motors India stopped producing passenger cars for the Indian market in late 2017. It however continues to produce vehicles for export to other markets.
Vehicles currently imported into India
Aston Martin:[147] Vantage, Vanquish, Rapide, Virage, DB9, DBS, One-77.
Audi:[148] A8 L, A7, A5, TT, RS 6 Avant, R8.
Bentley:[149][150] Arnage, Azure, Brooklands, Continental GT, Continental Flying Spur, Mulsanne.
BMW:[151] 5 Series GT, 6 Series, 7 Series, X5 M, X6, X6 M, M3, M5, M6 and Z4.
Fiat: Abarth 595 Competizone
General Motors:[157] Hummer H2, Hummer H3.
Gumpert:[158] Apollo.
Lamborghini:[163] Huracan, Aventador.
Land Rover (Subsidiary of Tata Motors):[133] Discovery 4, Range Rover Velar, Range Rover Sport, Range Rover.
Mercedes-Benz:[165] Viano.
MINI:[135] Cooper, Cooper S, Convertible.
Mitsubishi: Montero.
Nissan:GT-R.
Porsche:[166][167] 997, Boxster, Panamera, Cayman, Cayenne, Carrera GT, Macan.
Rolls Royce:[168] Ghost, Wraith, Phantom, Phantom Coupé, Phantom Drophead Coupé.
SsangYong (subsidiary of Mahindra & Mahindra):[169] Rexton.
Volkswagen:[170] Beetle.
Volvo:[171] V40, V90, S60, S90, XC60, XC90.
Commercial vehicle manufacturers in India
Indian brands
Joint-venture (JV) brands
Ashok Leyland[177] - originally a JV between Ashok Motors (owned by the Hinduja Group) and Leyland Motors, now joint ventures between Ashok Leyland and Nissan Motors (Japan) for LCV's; and John Deere (USA) for construction equipment.[178]
KaMAZ Vectra[179] - A JV between Russia's KaMAZ and the Vectra Group
MAN Force - A JV between Force Motors and MAN AG (Germany)
SML Isuzu - originally, as Swaraj Mazda, a JV between Punjab Tractors and Mazda, now 53.5% owned by Sumitomo Group and with its current name since 2011.[180]
Tatra Vectra Motors Ltd - (defunct) Initial truck partnership with India by Vectra. Replaced by Kamaz. Tatra trucks for sale in India are now manufactured in collaboration with Bharat Earth Movers Limited.
VE Commercial Vehicles Limited[181] - VE Commercial Vehicles limited - A JV between Volvo Group and Eicher Motors Limited.
Maruti Suzuki - A joint venture of Indian Maruti and Japanese Suzuki.
Foreign-owned brands
J. C. Bamford (JCB) (Owned by British multinational corporation J. C. Bamford).
BharatBenz (Owned by Daimler AG of Germany and affiliated with Daimler's Fuso and Mercedes-Benz brands)[182]
DAF[184]
Hino[185]
Isuzu[186]
Iveco[187]
MAN
Mercedes-Benz[188] - manufactures luxury coaches in India.
Piaggio[189]
Rosenbauer.[190]
Scania[191]
Tatra.[192]
Volvo.[193]
Electric vehicle and Hybrid vehicle (xEV) industry
During April 2012, the Indian government planned to unveil the road map for the development of domestic electric and hybrid vehicles (xEV) in the country.[194] A discussion between the various stakeholders, including Government, industry, and academia, was expected to take place during 23–24 February.[194] The final contours of the policy would have been formed after this set of discussions. Ministries such as Petroleum, Finance, Road Transport, and Power are involved in developing a broad framework for the sector. Along with these ministries, auto industry executives, such as Anand Mahindra (Vice Chairman and Managing Director, Mahindra & Mahindra) and Vikram Kirloskar (Vice-Chairman, Toyota Kirloskar), were involved in this task.[194] The Government has also proposed to set up a Rs 740 crore research and development fund for the sector in the 12th five-year plan during 2012-17.[194] The idea is to reduce the high cost of key imported components such as the battery and electric motor, and to develop such capabilities locally. In the year 2017, An Amaravati, Andhra Pradesh based Electric Vehicles manufacturing company called AVERA[195] New & Renewable Energy started electric scooters manufacturing[196] and are ready to launch their two models of scooters by the end of December 2018.[197]
Electric cars are seen as economical long-term investments, as one doesn't need to purchase gas, but needs only to recharge the battery, using renewable energy sources. According to the United States Department of Energy, electric cars produce half as much CO2 emissions as compared to a gas-powered car.[198] According to The Economic Times, 60% of Indian customers expect fuel prices to go up in the next 12 months and 58% expect to buy a new car in the same time frame. Most consumers are looking to buy a car which gives good mileage. According to the same source, 68% of Asian drivers expect higher mileage from their cars due to the higher fuel prices. This has encouraged 38% of Indian automobile consumers to switch to electric or hybrid cars.[199] Due to this change in the market, many companies, such as Toyota, have planned to introduce electric vehicles in India; and Suzuki has tested almost 50 electric prototypes in India already, according to Mashable.In 2019 Hyundai Launched India’s First Electric Car Kona Electric . [200]
Electric car manufacturers in India
Driverless Technology in India
Flux Auto
FishEyeBox
Hi Tech Robotic Systemz
ATImotors
Netradyne
Swaayat Robots
Auro Robotics
OmniPresent Robotics
SeDrica 1.0[208]
Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of India
Automobile Products of India or API - founded in 1949 at Bombay (now Mumbai), by the British company Rootes Group,[211] and later bought by M. A. Chidambaram of the MAC Group from Madras (now Chennai).[211] The company manufactured Lambretta scooters, API Three Wheelers under licence from Innocenti of Italy and automobile ancillaries, notably clutch and braking systems. API's registered offices were earlier in Mumbai, later shifted to Chennai, in Tamil Nadu. The manufacturing facilities were located in Mumbai and Aurangabad in Maharashtra and in Ambattur, Chennai.[212] The company has not been operational since 2002.
Escorts Yamaha - in 1984 Escorts formed a joint venture with Yamaha to manufacture motorcycles. In 2008 became India Yamaha Motor.
Hero Motors is a former moped and scooter manufacturer based in Delhi, India. It is a part of multinational company Hero Group, which also currently owns Hero Motocorp (formerly Hero Honda) and Hero Cycles, among others. Hero Motors was started in the 1960s to manufacture 50cc two-stroke mopeds but gradually diversified into making larger mopeds, mokicks and scooters in the 1980s and the 1990s. Noteworthy collaborators and technical partners were Puch of Austria and Malaguti of Italy. Due to tightening emission regulations and poor sales, Hero motors have discontinued the manufacture of all gasoline powered vehicles and transformed itself into an electric two-wheeler and auto parts manufacturer.
Ideal Jawa - motorcycle company based in Mysore, sold licensed Jawa and ČZ motorcycles beginning in 1960 under the brand name Jawa and later Yezdi.
Kinetic Honda - a joint venture between Kinetic Engineering Limited, India and Honda Motor Company, Japan. The joint venture operated during 1984 - 1998, manufacturing 2-stroke scooters in India. In 1998, the joint venture was terminated after which Kinetic Engineering continued to sell the models under the brand name Kinetic until 2008[213] when the interests were sold to Mahindra.
Mopeds India Limited - produces the Suvega range of Mopeds under technical collaboration with Motobécane of France.
Standard - produced by Standard Motor Products in Madras from 1949 to 1988. Indian Standards were variations of vehicles made in the U.K. by Standard-Triumph.Standard Motor Products of India Ltd. (SMPI) was incorporated in 1948,[214] and their first product was the Vanguard, which began to be assembled in 1949. The company was dissolved in 2006 and the old plant torn down.
Automotive Research Association of India - Standards
The Government of India felt the need for a permanent agency to expedite the publication of standards and development of test facilities[215] in parallel with the work of the preparation of the standards - as the development of improved safety critical parts could be undertaken only after the publication of the standard and commissioning of test facilities. The Ministry of Surface Transport (MoST) constituted a permanent Automotive Industry Standards Committee (AISC) . The Standards prepared by AISC will be approved by the permanent CMVR Technical Standing Committee (CTSC). After approval, the Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) [216] will publish this standard.
Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) are globally proven systems to optimize the utilization of existing transport infrastructure and improve transportation systems in terms of efficiency, quality, comfort and safety. Having realized the potential of ITS, Government bodies and other organizations in India are presently working towards implementing various components of ITS across the country.
The first step taken for creation and implementation of ITS was holding a National Workshop titled "User Requirements for Interactive ITS Architecture",[217] which was conducted as a collaboration between SIAM and ASRTU on 26 & 27 February 2015. This was primarily focused on ITS in Public Bus Transportation. Nonetheless, the workshop helped to create the outline for "National Intelligent Transport System Architecture and Policy for Public Transport (Bus)", which was submitted by ASRTU and SIAM to the government
In the 44th & 45th CMVR-TSC, Chairman had directed - standardization activities to be initiated on Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) - Vehicle Location Tracking, Camera Surveillance System and Emergency Request Button. The committee intended to extend the above user requirements to all public transportation namely –buses, taxis, etc. The current document covers the requirements for Vehicle Location Tracking and Emergency Button. The other ITS components like PIS, CCTV system, Fare collection etc. are deliberated and would be addressed in later phase and could be added as separate parts to the current document..
Based on these directions, the AISC Panel on ITS has prepared this AIS-140 titled,"Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) - Requirements for Public Transport Vehicle Operation". The panel also deliberated and identified the necessary elements for an effective implementation of vehicle level ITS system.
For AIS-140 Devices, in India, connectivity to report location, and Emergency Panic Button signal is though wireless cellular connectivity. There are device focused Cellular Connectivity Offerings like 'eSIM4Things[218]' available in India, which cater to connectivity requirements of AIS-140 devices.[219] eSIM4Things[218] is fully compatible with all AIS-140 devices and with a connectivity manager and a range of tariff plans.
See also
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