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Paper Title

Electrifying passenger road transport in India requires near-term electricity grid decarbonisation

Authors

Avinash Kumar Agarwal
Avinash Kumar Agarwal
Amir F. N. Abdul-Manan
Amir F. N. Abdul-Manan

Keywords

  • Battery-Electric Vehicles
  • BEV
  • Greenhouse Gas Emissions
  • GHG Mitigation
  • India
  • Electrification
  • 4-Wheelers
  • 2-Wheelers
  • Electric Hybrids
  • Gasoline-Electric Hybrids
  • GHG Reduction
  • Self-Charging Hybrids
  • Battery Capacity
  • Annual Battery Capacity
  • 125GWh
  • Coal-Power Phase-Out
  • Summer Charging
  • Efficiency
  • Transport Electrification
  • Mobility Transition
  • Projected Production
  • Electrification Plan

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 13 | Issue : 2095 | Page No : 1-13

Published On

April, 2022

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Abstract

Battery-electric vehicles (BEV) have emerged as a favoured technology solution to mitigate transport greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in many non-Annex 1 countries, including India. GHG mitigation potentials of electric 4-wheelers in India depend critically on when and where they are charged: 40% reduction in the north-eastern states and more than 15% increase in the eastern/western regions today, with higher overall GHGs emitted when charged overnight and in the summer. Self-charging gasoline-electric hybrids can lead to 33% GHG reductions, though they haven’t been fully considered a mitigation option in India. Electric 2-wheelers can already enable a 20% reduction in GHG emissions given their small battery size and superior efficiency. India’s electrification plan demands up to 125GWh of annual battery capacities by 2030, nearly 10% of projected worldwide productions. India requires a phased electrification with a near-term focus on 2-wheelers and a clear trajectory to phase-out coal-power for an organised mobility transition.

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