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Tesla Can Produce EVs In India But Must Not Import Vehicles From China: Nitin Gadkari

Nitin Gadkari on Tuesday said if Tesla is ready to manufacture its electric vehicles in India then there is no problem.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>Nitin Gadkari speaks during a session in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)</p></div>
Nitin Gadkari speaks during a session in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

Union minister Nitin Gadkari on Tuesday said if the U.S.-based Tesla is ready to manufacture its electric vehicles in India then there is 'no problem' but the company must not import cars from China.

In an interactive session at the Raisina Dialogue, Gadkari further said India is a large market and there is a huge potential for all electric vehicles.

"If Elon Musk (Tesla CEO) is ready to manufacture in India then there is no problem ... Come to India, start manufacturing, India is a large market they can export from India," he said.

The road transport and highways minister said his request to Musk is to come and manufacture in India.

"But if he wants to manufacture in China and sell in India, then it cannot be a good proposition for India," Gadkari said.

Last year, the heavy industries ministry had also asked Tesla to first start manufacturing its iconic electric vehicles in India before any tax concessions can be considered.

At present, cars imported as completely built units attract customs duty ranging from 60-100%, depending on engine size and cost, insurance and freight value less or above $40,000.

Last year, in a letter to the road ministry, the U.S. firm had stated that the effective import tariff of 110% on vehicles with customs value above $40,000 is 'prohibitive' to zero-emission vehicles.

It had requested the government to standardise the tariff on electric cars to 40% irrespective of the customs value, and withdraw the social welfare surcharge of 10% on electric cars.

It had stated that these changes would boost the development of the Indian EV ecosystem and the company will make significant direct investments in sales, service, and charging infrastructure; and significantly increase procurement from India for its global operations.

The company had argued that these proposals would not have any negative impact on the Indian automotive market as no Indian OEM currently produces a car (EV or ICE) with ex-factory price above $40,000 (around Rs 30.6 lakh) and only 1-2% of cars sold in India (EV or ICE) have ex-factory/customs value above $40,000.