India’s First Dedicated Highway Corridors for EVs Expected by Mar 2020

Working on the need for switching to cleaner technology in the transport sector, NHEV Official says India's first highway corridors for EVs with charging stations are expected to come up along the Delhi-Jaipur and Delhi-Agra highways by 2020.

According to reports, India first highway corridors with charging stations for electric vehicles are expected to come up along the Delhi-Jaipur and Delhi-Agra highways by 2020.

The combined stretch of the corridors on the Yamuna Expressway (between Delhi and Agra) and the National Highway 48 (between Delhi and Jaipur) will be 500 km, and 18 charging stations will be setup near toll plazas on the two routes, the official said.

The e-corridors are proposed to be the first under the Ease of Doing Business Programme (EODB) of the Advance Services for Social and Administrative Reforms (ASSAR), a private entity which is supported by the central government, an official engaged in the project said.

“The project is about converting 500-km of expressway into electric corridors with facilities for charging electric vehicles. Test runs on these corridors are expected to begin this September and these e-corridors will be launched in March 2020,” National Programme Director EODB at ASSAR, Abhijeet Sinha, said.

Eighteen charging stations will be setup on the two routes.Eight will be between Delhi-Agra and 10 between Delhi-Jaipur. Besides charging their vehicles, people can also change batteries, he told. “These stations will be developed near toll plazas. Every station will have eight to 10 chargers and 20 charging points,” Sinha said.

“Six more charging stations have been proposed between Pari Chowk in Greater Noida and Delhi, a region which has dense population. We have made a recommendation in this regard to the Noida Authority for facilitating land,” said Sinha, who is also the Programme Director for NHEV (National Highways for Electric Vehicles) 2020.

On the cost of the entire project, he said developing a single charging station would cost somewhere around Rs two crore and the electricity charges would be extra. “Developing a km stretch of a four-lane highway costs anywhere between Rs 14 crore and Rs 20 crore,” he said, citing official statistics. “The normal power tariff comes to Rs 6 to Rs 8 per unit across states. We are trying to get uniform rates across the states for the project as it progresses,” Sinha added.

Sinha said the immediate focus is towards developing infrastructure for electric vehicles in the country. The Housing and Urban Affairs ministry had made amendments to the Model Building Byelaws (MBBL) 2016 and Urban Regional Development Plans Formulation and Implementation (URDPFI) Guidelines 2014, making provisions for establishing EV charging infrastructure.

“In the initial stages, the plan is to attract larger fleet operators like state transports and taxi services,” he added. Earlier this year, the central government had issued a set of guidelines to set up charging stations for electric vehicles across the country, outlining ways to build such fuelling points every 25 km. The government expects 25 percent of the total vehicles on roads will be electric vehicles by 2030, necessitating to erect robust electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure across the country, according to the Union Housing and Urban Affairs Ministry.

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