Accelerated adoption of electric and shared vehicles could save USD 60 billion in diesel and petrol cost and cut down as much as 1 gigatonne of carbon emissions for India by 2030, the Niti Aayog has said in a report, advocating standardised, smart and swappable batteries with lease and/or pay-per-use business models.
"The swapping (battery) policy I feel is not appropriate for the country because it is a very difficult thing... that is not going to be possible in the country," Gadkari, who holds the portfolio of road transport, highways and shipping, said at the Smart Mobility Conference organised by Ficci.
Given high levels of pollution in Delhi and other places, electric vehicles for public transport besides vehicles on bio-fuel are the need of the hour and the government is working on charging infrastructure, the minister said further.
Gadkari asserted that this mode of transport will check pollution as the 22 per cent annual growth in the automobile sector requires one additional lane of highway every third year at a cost of Rs 80,000 crore, which is not viable.
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The minister is set to hold discussions with Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal for electric vehicles in the city to be used mostly for public transport. One estimate puts Delhi's requirement at 10,000 such buses.
Terming smart mobility "a million dollar question" in the country, the minister said bikes on flex fuel are set to be rolled out here next month.
He stressed the need for promoting bio fuel to combat pollution, highlighting the need for cost-effective, pollution free and indigenous system to deal with it.
The petroleum ministry is working on a Cabinet note on manufacturing second generation ethanol from rice and wheat straws and a policy on checking crop burning is likely in a month.
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