Critics say India cannot look at electric vehicle options because it is already a power-deficit country with an average power shortfall of over 10 per cent. India, however, has abundant solar energy potential across the country. It should be looking at marrying solar power to mobility. Solar panels can be set up to charge vehicle batteries. Buses running on dedicated tracks can switch to power. More trains can be electrified. Many things can be done if there is cohesive thinking at the top of the pyramid of governance. Instead, what the country sees is stray measures "" the Delhi state government announcing incentives for electric vehicles, and the Prime Minister's Energy Coordination Committee pushing for the use of solar lanterns across the country instead of kerosene ones. Such diffused non-measures are not going to have any meaningful impact on the oil challenge that the country faces. What is needed is an integrated and strategic approach to deal with both sticker shock as well as the possibility of oil supply constraints in the long run. For instance, can solar panels be mandated in townships where apartment costs have already soared, and where the additional cost will therefore be marginal? Can suitable incentives be given for the local manufacture of electric vehicles? Can there be incentives for saving liquid fuel, instead of encouraging its consumption by keeping prices down? What about investing more in public transport systems across the country. In short, every effort should be made to wean the economy away from oil, and in the process, to earn some green points too. And if oil at $140 per barrel does not prompt action in this direction, what will?