8000 Indians only need Electric Cars

SIBY HERALD

Hyundai Motor Co. launched India’s first electric SUV this summer with a quirky TV commercial urging millennial to “Drive into the Future." A few months later, the automaker finds itself on a lonesome road.


In a nation of about 150 million drivers, only 130 Kona SUVs were sold to dealers through August. That slow pace is emblematic of the difficulties car makers data-face in establishing an electric foothold in the fourth-biggest auto market, even with committed government support.



The Kona sells for about $35,000 while the average Indian earns about $2,000 a year and the best-selling gas guzzler costs $4,000. Yet Kona’s sticker price only kicks off the conversation about why EVs aren’t gaining traction in india there’s also a lack of charging infrastructure, a reluctance by banks to finance purchases and an unwillingness among government departments to use EVs as directed.


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