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PLI scheme: Auto component companies hope to pare imports

It would also reduce imp­orts from countries like China, Taiwan and South Korea and facilitate foreign collaborators to set up manufacturing footprint in India

auto components
India imported parts worth $13.8 billion in FY21 while it exported $13.3 billion worth of parts in the same year, according to Automotive Component Manufacturers Association (ACMA).
Shally Seth Mohile Mumbai
4 min read Last Updated : Oct 06 2021 | 9:35 AM IST
The productivity-linked incentive (PLI) scheme for the automotive sector, which got notified last week, would help manufacturers introduce new technologies with higher local content.
 
It would also reduce imp­orts from countries like China, Taiwan and South Korea and facilitate foreign collaborators to set up manufacturing footprint in India, said executives of auto component firms. This, in turn, could also make India an export hub, they added.
 
India imported parts worth $13.8 billion in FY21 while it exported $13.3 billion worth of parts in the same year, according to Automotive Component Manufacturers Association (ACMA). The PLI is expected to bridge the trade deficit, which reduced to $0.5 billion in FY21, said experts.
 
China’s share in the overall import pie was the highest at 29 per cent, followed by South Korea at 13 per cent and Ger­many 10 per cent. The remaining 48 per cent came from Jap­an, the US, Thailand, Si­n­­ga­pore and others. The department of heavy industries (DHI) is expected to notify, in a few days, a detailed list of parts that are eligible for PLI. After this, component makers can initiate work on applying for the scheme. Once an application is approved, investment decisions can be firmed up.
 
“We expect to complete the whole process by the end of this year,” said Nirmal K Min­da, chairman, Minda Indus­tries. Minda, which makes a diversified range of auto parts, including alternative fuel systems, air filtration systems, sw­itches, sensors actuators and advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS), among others, is expected to be among the key beneficiaries of the PLI sch­eme. The scheme will speed up the localisation of new technologies and promote exports, he said, citing an instance of battery charger and controller and various other parts that are used in electric vehicles (EVs).
 
Deepak Jain, chairman and managing director at Lumax Industries, said, “It would facilitate investments in the joint ventures we have forged in the recent past. It only helps that the scheme has revenue-linked targets,” said Jain. Lumax controls 60 per cent share in the automotive segment. With its wide range of lighting products and shifters, it is well positioned to benefit from the scheme.

The scheme will help in launching an adva­nced technology product with a high local content, added Jain. He said after automatic transmission and automated manual transmission, a new technology like shi­ft-by-wire can be introduced with a high local content. 
 
Under the scheme, the local content can be as high as 60 per cent over a five year-period against 20 per cent if one had launched it without the PLI, added Jain. For auto components, the incentives range from 8 to 18 per cent. Battery and hydrogen fuel cell makers will get an additional incentive of 5 per cent. The scheme has excluded petrol, diesel and CNG vehicles from its purview for the time being.
 
Aakash Minda, executive director, Minda Corp, which specialises in starter motors, security systems and wiring harness, said the company was exploring technology partnerships, telematics, EV components and ADAS.
 
Suresh K.V, president of ZF India, said, “The scheme excellently dovetails with the Make in India and is in sync with all the past schemes.”
 
Most of the family-run auto component firms and multinationals will be eligible for the scheme, said Hemal Thakkar, director of CRISIL Research. “It provides a sizable opportunity for auto components,” he said.
 
According to Thakkar, it will help in import substitution of electric and electronic parts that account for a sizable portion of auto component im­ports from South Asian countries and China.

But there are exceptions and not all firms may jump into availing the scheme readily.  Take Dana India, the multinational auto component maker that counts various commercial and passenger vehicle makers in India as its customer and exports close to a third of what it makes in India.
Dana has nine legal entities in India.

To be able to use the critical mass that makes it eligible for the scheme, the minimum investment required for any company is Rs250 crore for five years. While the company invests the said amount in less than five years it is not invested by a single entity but by various entities, said Gajanan Gandhe, Country Head, Dana India. "While we are still awaiting clarity, its a bit of a stretch for us at this point." Dana needs clarification on whether the multiple legal entities owned by different parent companies of Dana in different parts of the world qualify for PLI, he said.

Topics :PLI schemeAuto components industryimportsLumax IndustriesAuto part makers

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