In a white paper submitted to the government, the
Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM) also mooted exemption
of road tax for electric vehicles
In order to promote electric vehicles (EVs) in India, auto
industry body SIAM has suggested reduction of GST on such automobiles to
5 per cent, besides one-time income tax deduction of 30 per cent of
vehicle price for non-financed buyers.
In a white paper submitted
to the government, the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM)
also mooted exemption of road tax for EVs, while stating that a multi-
pronged, segment and customer specific policy will be needed for a
successful transition to electric mobility.
The policy should
collectively aim at improving affordability and acceptance of electric
vehicles by bridging viability gap; enabling charging infrastructure
build-out; encouraging domestic manufacturing and creating public
awareness besides providing other enablers, it said.
"Demand
incentives or cash subsidies can at best be a short-term measure to
kick-start the process. However, tax rebates and other fiscal and
non-fiscal measures can be sustained over a longer term and will have a
greater impact and outreach," the paper said.
On specific fiscal
measures, SIAM said GST rate for all EVs may be brought down from 12 per
cent to 5 per cent and road tax be fully exempted.
For EV buyers,
the paper proposed a "one-time income tax deduction of 30 per cent of
vehicle price from total taxable income to individual purchasers, who
have not availed any bank finance for the purchase".
To determine
the cut-off price for such an incentive, a maximum vehicle price of Rs
25 lakh (the same used to define SUVs as per SIAM classification) may be
considered, it added.
The paper further said for individuals who
have availed bank finance to purchase a personal EV, "income tax
deduction of up to Rs 1 lakh on the interest component for loans taken
may be given every year during the tenure of the loan, like government’s
scheme on home loans".
On interest rate of finance, it sought a favourable treatment similar to priority sector lending for electric vehicles.
Seeking
non-fiscal support, the white paper said power tariff for charging of
EVs could be 50 per cent of the existing domestic rate for home and
workplace charging.
"Attractive power tariff rate at public charging infrastructure could be considered to enhance utilisation," it added.
Exemption
of toll charges for all EVs, parking fees for all personal EVs and
allowing electric 2-wheelers to be used as taxis nationwide are among
several measures suggested by SIAM.
The auto industry body has
proposed all new vehicle sales in India to be pure electric by 2047
while the same for intra-city public transport fleet can be achieved by
2030.
It is aiming at 40 per cent of new vehicle sales in the country
to be pure electric by 2030, in line with the government’s vision of
100 per cent electric for public mobility and 40 per cent electric for
personal mobility by 2030.
25 Dec 2017, 10:47 AM