Context:
The Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) proposed fuel consumption standards for Light Commercial Vehicles (LCVs) for the period 2027–2032, aiming to accelerate electric mobility.
Key Highlights:
- Current Status
- LCVs form 48% of India’s commercial goods vehicles (2024).
- Only 2% are electric (e-LCVs).
- Fleet average emissions: 147.5 g CO₂/km.
- Proposed Norm
- Target: 115 g CO₂/km.
- Slightly above the 116.5 g CO₂/km threshold needed for cost-effective e-LCV adoption.
- Regulatory Background
- LCVs were previously outside Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE) norms.
- Automakers’ request for exemption was denied.
- Incentive Mechanisms
- Draft proposes super credits for e-LCVs (CO₂ value = zero for compliance).
- Credits also extended to hybrids and select ICE technologies.
- PM E-DRIVE scheme currently excludes LCVs.
- States like Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh offer incentives.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Light Commercial Vehicle (LCV): Sub-3.5 tonne goods vehicles.
- CAFE Norms: Fleet-wide CO₂ emission standards for automakers.
- Battery Electric Vehicle (BEV): Fully electric vehicle using battery power.
- Super Credit Multiplier: Regulatory mechanism giving extra compliance value to EVs.
- India’s climate commitments under Paris Agreement (2015) include emission intensity reduction.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Importance of LCV Electrification
- High usage in e-commerce logistics.
- Reduces urban air pollution.
- Contributes to India’s Net Zero 2070 target.
- Challenges
- High upfront cost.
- Limited charging infrastructure.
- Model availability constraints.
- Risk of over-reliance on hybrids delaying full BEV transition.
- Policy Evaluation
- Super credits accelerate adoption but may distort long-term compliance.
- Absence of central incentives weakens push.
- Need alignment with broader EV ecosystem policies.
- Environmental & Economic Benefits
- Reduced fossil fuel dependence.
- Lower lifecycle emissions.
- Promotes domestic battery manufacturing.
Way Forward
- Phase out hybrid incentives gradually.
- Include LCVs in central EV incentive schemes.
- Expand charging infrastructure in logistics hubs.
- Promote indigenous battery R&D.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS 3: Environment & Ecology – Climate mitigation
- GS 3: Economy – Sustainable transport transition
- GS 2: Governance – Regulatory frameworks
Prelims: CAFE norms, EV policy instruments
