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Skoda Plots Sub-Rs 20 Lakh Electric Car For India

The Volkswagen Group has previously signalled its intent to introduce electric vehicles (EV) in India, and now, member company Skoda Auto has confirmed it is plotting a new, affordable battery-powered model for the Indian market. Speaking to car&bike and another Indian automotive portal at an event marking the carmaker’s entry into Vietnam, a senior Skoda official said that introducing an entry-level battery electric vehicle in India is a necessity for the company. This brand-new EV, which is expected to be in the mould of an SUV, will follow the launch of the all-electric Enyaq, and Skoda is targeting an aggressive price of under Rs 20 lakh for its most affordable EV. 

“We have to come to India with an entry BEV. We will now be bringing Enyaq, which is a premium car, but an entry BEV or more affordable BEV than Enyaq, it is a necessity for us in India,” said Martin Jahn, Board Member for Sales and Marketing at Skoda Auto. 

 The carmaker is currently evaluating “several potential partnerships”, Jahn added, while saying that it is very much viable to produce electric cars in India today, despite the country still having to rely on imports for key EV components. 

  Skoda is yet to finalise the architecture it will go with for its entry-level EV, but the company is in talks with other manufacturers for potential cooperation, and is also evaluating the possibility of modifying and localising the VW Group’s MEB architecture. 

  “For the entry EV’s architecture, we are exploring possibilities; it could be either MEB adjusted [modified] or it could be in cooperation with another partner. As such, it would have to be somewhere between €15,000 to €20,000 (that’s equivalent to Rs 13-18 lakh)”, said Jahn, hinting at the price positioning for the new EV. 

  While he steered clear of divulging names, it is understood that the Volkswagen Group is in talks with Indian carmaker Mahindra for a potential alliance that will result in co-developed, cost-effective EVs for the Indian market. Skoda continues to lead activities for the Group in India, and there is a real possibility of the Group leveraging Mahindra’s newly-developed INGLO architecture for its future models. 

  To be able to achieve its aggressive price targets, Skoda will have to build the EV locally, but while Jahn agreed that localisation could help lower costs, the ultimate challenge the company faces is battery prices, which eventually has the most significant impact on the cost of an electric vehicle for the end buyer. Making an EV that is affordable, yet profitable, will be the brand’s priority, Jahn explained. 

  “Localisation is one thing. The most important issue is actually the battery price, the battery cell and the battery package. That is the fact that influences the price of the EV the most.. There are not too many good entry BEVs around the world that make money, because if they are cheap, they’re usually not a big money-maker, which is also not [feasible] in the long-term. We would like to have a solution that is affordable but also has profit potential”, Jahn said, adding that exporting locally-made EVs from India to other countries – including Vietnam – would be inevitable in the time to come. 

  Mahindra is already set to source crucial MEB architecture components, including the electric powertrain as well as battery systems and cells, from the Volkswagen Group. The Group is also aware of Mahindra’s desire to locally produce battery cells, with the Indian firm having applied for the advanced chemistry cell production-linked incentive (ACC PLI) scheme in 2022, which could benefit both companies. 

  Abroad, the Group has a derivative of its MEB Entry platform named MEB21F (the last character denoting front-wheel drive) which it plans to employ for affordable EVs. Sources say the platform has clear structural similarities with the MQB A0 architecture, a modified version of which underpins the India-made Kushaq and Slavia, and is also likely to form the base for an upcoming subcompact SUV. 

 The MEB21F platform is said to be cheaper to produce as it has shorter wiring harnesses and more effective cooling loops, with all high-voltage systems positioned close to the front axle. This architecture will also be able to accept batteries of over 50 kWh in capacity, with more attainable versions packing lithium-ferro-phosphate (LFP) chemistry cells, and long-range versions equipped with more energy dense nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC cells). 

 Skoda’s affordable EV is understood to be at least two to three years away from being market-ready, but when it does emerge, it’s almost certain that a mechanically-identical twin wearing the Volkswagen badge will follow it closely. It’s also worth noting that by then, the current market leader in EVs, Tata Motors, will have nearly 10 battery-powered offerings in its portfolio, and leading carmaker Maruti Suzuki, too, will have entered the EV fray. Noting this, it would be prudent on Skoda’s part to fast-track the development of more electric models as it aims to garner considerable market share in the time to come.