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India’s e-rickshaws drive market boom

Kailash Kumar

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India’s e-rickshaws drive market boom

October 28, 2018

1350846-2009547478.png

As many as 11,000 new e-rickshaws hit the streets every month, and annual sales are expected to increase by about 9 percent.

NEW DELHI: Rajan Kashyap, 28, is more relaxed than he was three years ago, when he was constantly in debt.

He attributes his more relaxed life to the electric rickshaw, or e-rickshaw as it is popularly known.

He used to be a small-time sculptor, but within a year of buying the three-wheel e-rickshaw, he was able to extricate himself from debt.

“In three years, I managed to buy three e-rickshaws from the money I saved,” Kashyap, who uses his e-rickshaw in New Delhi, told Arab News.

“One I run myself, and the other two are given on rentals and they fetch me good money every month,” he said. “I earn 1,200-1500 rupees ($16-$21) per day, which is almost double the money I earned in my previous job.”

Today, e-rickshaws are the most visible vehicles in New Delhi and many other parts of India. In the national capital, the number of e-rickshaws has risen from 4,000 in 2010 to more than 100,000 by 2017, according to a report by the New Delhi-based Centre for Civil Society.

As many as 11,000 new e-rickshaws hit the streets every month, and annual sales are expected to increase by about 9 percent by 2021, Bloomberg reported.

New Delhi-based economist Prerna Raj said they represent a $2 billion market in India. The Finance Ministry is reportedly planning to spend about 40 billion rupees in the next five years to improve the country’s charging infrastructure and to subsidize e-buses.

Amitabh Kant, CEO of the National Institution for Transforming India, a government think tank, said: “The future lies in electric mobility, and India needs to take a lead in this.”
He added: “If we are able to make technological breakthroughs in the areas of storage and batteries, if we can make a massive breakthrough in electric mobility, India will leapfrog the world.”

E-rickshaw operator Moni Kumar said: “The main challenge remains the charging of batteries. The government needs to provide facilities for charging batteries.”

Another issue affecting the growth of the e-rickshaw market is accessibility to loans. E-rickshaw manufacturer Shishir Agrawal told Arab News: “Poor drivers need subsidies and loans, and the government needs to work on that. If that’s taken care of, India will see a boom in e-rickshaw growth.”

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1394581/offbeat
 
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India’s e-rickshaws drive market boom

October 28, 2018

1350846-2009547478.png

As many as 11,000 new e-rickshaws hit the streets every month, and annual sales are expected to increase by about 9 percent.

NEW DELHI: Rajan Kashyap, 28, is more relaxed than he was three years ago, when he was constantly in debt.

He attributes his more relaxed life to the electric rickshaw, or e-rickshaw as it is popularly known.

He used to be a small-time sculptor, but within a year of buying the three-wheel e-rickshaw, he was able to extricate himself from debt.

“In three years, I managed to buy three e-rickshaws from the money I saved,” Kashyap, who uses his e-rickshaw in New Delhi, told Arab News.

“One I run myself, and the other two are given on rentals and they fetch me good money every month,” he said. “I earn 1,200-1500 rupees ($16-$21) per day, which is almost double the money I earned in my previous job.”

Today, e-rickshaws are the most visible vehicles in New Delhi and many other parts of India. In the national capital, the number of e-rickshaws has risen from 4,000 in 2010 to more than 100,000 by 2017, according to a report by the New Delhi-based Centre for Civil Society.

As many as 11,000 new e-rickshaws hit the streets every month, and annual sales are expected to increase by about 9 percent by 2021, Bloomberg reported.

New Delhi-based economist Prerna Raj said they represent a $2 billion market in India. The Finance Ministry is reportedly planning to spend about 40 billion rupees in the next five years to improve the country’s charging infrastructure and to subsidize e-buses.

Amitabh Kant, CEO of the National Institution for Transforming India, a government think tank, said: “The future lies in electric mobility, and India needs to take a lead in this.”
He added: “If we are able to make technological breakthroughs in the areas of storage and batteries, if we can make a massive breakthrough in electric mobility, India will leapfrog the world.”

E-rickshaw operator Moni Kumar said: “The main challenge remains the charging of batteries. The government needs to provide facilities for charging batteries.”

Another issue affecting the growth of the e-rickshaw market is accessibility to loans. E-rickshaw manufacturer Shishir Agrawal told Arab News: “Poor drivers need subsidies and loans, and the government needs to work on that. If that’s taken care of, India will see a boom in e-rickshaw growth.”

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1394581/offbeat
Good news. So finally the trillion dolla economy is moving up from this ....


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Ps. Your nearly 60 years late. We got rid of these way back in 1959.


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Good job with going more electric India.
 
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Good news. So finally the trillion dolla economy is moving up from this ....


HbxAytI.jpg




Ps. Your nearly 60 years late. We got rid of these way back in 1959.


ayJKsjn.jpg
Why do you want a d**k measuring contest in every aspect and what's up with the tag of trillion dollar economy. Pakistan sucks in way more aspects when compared to India but you're going gaga over some freaking rickshaws lol
 
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tag of trillion dollar economy
Because I swear every second Indian poster will scratch his crotch and then croak "don't you know India is trillion dolla, 5th largest economy on earth and we sent a elephant to the Mars".

So I thought I would look at this and dress it down a bit ....
 
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Should make it compulsory in every Indian Metro. Richshaws do not need to travel more than 60km speed and Autowallas in Chennai are absolute nightmares sometimes. Good going.
 
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Because we know your’s is small and we have a high probability of winning. :partay:

Sorry couldn’t resist :enjoy:
Dude , how can u so sure without checking it ?
Mine alone would be bigger than all urs ... chal bhag !
 
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BBC told me. You don’t have to put your finger in a snakes mouth to know that his venom can kill. Cheers,
BBC ki maa ki **** to put it politely !

How would BBC know about dick size of a population which as big and diverse as India ?

Go and ask ur BBC to measure my dick , then it will tell you a different story .:woot::welcome:
 
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