India's trucking market is expected to grow over four times by 2050, a Niti Aayog report said on Friday and suggested that financial institutions can work to structure more-favourable financing solutions for zero-emission trucks.
The report titled 'Transforming Trucking in India: Pathways to Zero-Emission Truck Deployment' further said as road freight travel continues to grow, the number of trucks is expected to more than quadruple, from 4 million in 2022 to roughly 17 million trucks by 2050.
"India's trucking market is expected to grow over 4x by 2050 -- fuelling the nation's economy and transportation emissions," it said.
Pointing out that road transport (i.e. trucks) carries the bulk of India's goods, 70 per cent of today's domestic freight demand, the report said heavy and medium-duty trucks (HDTs and MDTs) are responsible for most of that road transportation.
According to the report, currently, India transports 4.6 billion tonnes of freight annually, generating a transport demand of 2.2 trillion tonne-kilometres (tonne-km) at the cost of Rs 9.5 lakh crore.
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Noting that demand for goods is rising with urbanisation, population increase, the rise of e-commerce and rising income levels, the report said as this demand continues to grow, associated road freight movement is expected to increase to 9.6 trillion tonne-km by 2050.
"In light of these market trends... lenders and other financial institutions can work to structure more-favourable financing for ZET loans through tailored loan products, better-informed depreciation criteria, and alternative credit evaluations," it suggested.
Zero-emissions trucks (ZETs) -- including battery electric trucks (BETs) and fuel cell electric trucks (FCETs) -- do not have tailpipe emissions and have lower operating costs.
As per the report, transportation costs are a major driver (62 per cent) of overall logistics costs in India, accounting for 14 per cent of India's GDP.
"Since diesel fuel costs account for the overwhelming majority of transportation costs, ZET adoption can dramatically lower associated fuel costs by up to 46 per cent over the vehicle's lifetime, with broad implications for the Indian economy," it noted.
With cost competitiveness and technology maturity, the report predicted that nearly 9 in 10 trucks sold in 2050 can be ZETs.
The report pitched for leveraging policy intervention to reduce charging costs, including upfront subsidies, electricity tariffs that remove demand charges and/or implement EV-friendly rate structures, and concessional land for building out ZET charging infrastructure.
It also suggested streamlining the infrastructure installation process to minimise the permitting and interconnection processing times for charging infrastructure development to lower charging deployment soft costs.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)