Softbank-backed Ola ramps up
electric vehicles push in India
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[April 07, 2017]
By Aditi Shah
NEW
DELHI (Reuters) - Indian ride-hailing firm Ola, backed by Japan's
Softbank Group, is preparing for a large-scale rollout of electric
vehicles by next year even as it runs trials on the viability of the
business model, Chief Executive Bhavish Aggarwal said.
Ola will pilot a few thousand electric vehicles in several Indian cities
this year and, "after that we will be scaling it up in a major way,"
Aggarwal said in an interview on Friday.
The company will also invest in setting up charging stations in the
pilot cities, he said, without saying how much Ola would invest in its
electrification drive.
Ola's push comes as sales of electric vehicles in India have remained
slow, despite government incentives to curb pollution.
In the year ended March 2016, 22,000 electric vehicles were sold in
India, whereas sales of conventionally fueled vehicles crossed 20
million units in the same period.
India is targeting 6 million electric vehicles on the road by 2020, but
high battery costs, a lack of charging stations and the limited range of
the vehicles is still a deterrent.
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Aggarwal, however, has the backing of one of Ola's biggest investors -
Softbank.
In December, Softbank Group chairman Masayoshi Son said Ola may
introduce one million electric vehicles in India over the next five
years, according to local media reports.
"We're able to leverage their (Softbank's) network and scale of
operations around the world," Aggarwal said, adding that Ola was also
talking to automakers globally about strategic tie-ups.
In India's $12 billion taxi market where Ola vies with ride-hailing
giant Uber, the push into electric vehicles is also a way for the Indian
start-up to lower the cost of car ownership, once battery costs start to
come down.
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Bhavish Aggarwal, CEO and co-founder of Ola, an app-based cab
service provider, poses in front of an Ola cab in Mumbai March 3,
2015. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade/File Photo - RTSLY9Y
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The
company is expected to be profitable in 18-24 months, Aggarwal said.
LEAP OF FAITH
In the next few weeks the first wave of electric vehicles under Ola's pilot
scheme, including two-wheelers, rickshaws and cars, will roll out in the
southern state of Telangana and Nagpur city in central India.
The main challenge for Ola is the lack of charging stations and the limited
range of vehicles given taxis travel about 150-200 km daily.
Aggarwal said for the pilot Ola was using modified versions of existing models,
but its goal remained to operate a vehicle for an entire day without a recharge
and it is working with automakers to co-design such vehicles.
For the pilot, where infrastructure is inadequate Ola will invest in setting up
charging stations but for the longer term it is talking to power and fuel
companies to form partnerships.
Charging stations would include a battery swapping facility for some vehicles
and quick recharges for others, Aggarwal said.
"We're taking a leap of faith ... The economics are still not there so we're
taking a bit of a risk," said Aggarwal, alluding to Ola's investment in the
pilot.
(Reporting by Aditi Shah; Editing by Euan Rocha and David Evans)
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