What’s ailing India’s battery scheme for EVs?

Below is the complete UPSC study note, grounded in PIB (Tier 1) sources and the article excerpt (Tier 4).


What's Ailing India's Battery Scheme for EVs?

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
May 2021 Cabinet approval: PLI scheme for ACC Battery Storage; outlay ₹18,100 crore [S1]
October 2021 Scheme formally launched [S5]
2022 NITI Aayog publishes "Need for ACC Energy Storage in India" reports advocating domestic manufacturing [S6]
May 2022 Bidding concluded; 10 bids (~130 GWh) received — strong initial interest [S7]
July 2022 4 companies selected for 50 GWh: Reliance New Energy Solar, Ola Electric, Hyundai Global Motors, Rajesh Exports [S2]
2023 Programme Agreements signed with 3 companies (Rajesh Exports dropped out) [S8]
2024 MHI awards 10 GWh to one additional bidder in supplementary round [S3]
Feb 2025 Programme Agreement signed with Reliance New Energy Battery Ltd for 10 GWh [S4]
2025 (deadline) Target of 50 GWh production capacity — missed entirely [S5]

Predecessor context: India's battery imports (primarily from China) account for a significant share of EV component costs; the scheme was designed to mirror the success of the PLI for mobile manufacturing but in a far more capital- and tech-intensive sector.


4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Scientific / Technological

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Administrative / Governance

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The ACC PLI scheme was approved by the Union Cabinet in May 2021 with an outlay of ₹18,100 crore. [S1]
  2. The scheme targets 50 GWh of ACC manufacturing capacity + 5 GWh of Niche ACC. [S1]
  3. Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Heavy Industries (MHI), not MNRE or MoP. [S1]
  4. The scheme is technology-agnostic — open to Li-ion, NMC, LFP, and sodium-ion chemistries. [S1][S5]
  5. Four original awardees: Reliance New Energy Solar, Ola Electric, Hyundai Global Motors, Rajesh Exports. [S2]
  6. Incentive structure: manufacturing facility set up in 2 years; incentives paid over 5 years on domestic sales. [S1]
  7. As of early 2026, only 1.4 GWh installed — less than 3% of the 50 GWh target. [S5]
  8. Jobs created: 1,118 — approximately 0.12% of the 1.03 million targeted. [S5]
  9. Expected savings on oil imports from ACC PLI success: ₹2–2.5 lakh crore. [S1]
  10. A Programme Agreement with Reliance New Energy Battery Ltd for 10 GWh was signed on 17 February 2025. [S4]
  11. Total bids received in the original bidding round: 10 bids aggregating ~130 GWh — nearly 2.6× the 50 GWh on offer. [S7]
  12. ACC stands for Advanced Chemistry Cell — stores electric energy as chemical energy and reconverts it. [S1][S5]
  13. Investment attracted under the scheme as of early 2026: approximately 25.58% of target. [S5]
  14. The scheme's analysis was published by IEEFA and JMK Research and Analysis (not government bodies). [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: Primarily GS-III (Indian Economy — industrial policy, energy, technology); secondary GS-II (governance, policy implementation)

Syllabus headings: - GS-III: Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways; Growth and Development; Government Budgeting; Effects of Liberalization on the Economy; Industrial Policy - GS-II: Government Policies and Interventions; Implementation of Policies

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Production Linked Incentive (PLI) model, while successful in mobile manufacturing, faces structural limits in deep-technology sectors. Critically examine with reference to the ACC battery scheme." (GS-III) 2. "India's EV ambitions are constrained by its dependence on Chinese battery imports. Analyse the challenges facing the domestic battery manufacturing ecosystem and suggest a policy roadmap." (GS-III) 3. "Evaluate the design and implementation failures of the ACC PLI scheme and discuss what governance reforms could make PLI instruments more effective for capital-intensive industries." (GS-II/III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
PLI Schemes (Overall) ACC PLI is one of 14 PLI schemes; understanding the broader framework helps compare sector-specific performance.
Critical Minerals Mission Battery manufacturing depends on lithium, cobalt, nickel — India's critical mineral strategy is a direct upstream enabler.
FAME Scheme (FAME-II / FAME-III) Demand-side EV incentive; without which the market for domestically-made batteries is thin.
National Electric Vehicle Policy 2024 Sets EV penetration targets that depend on ACC PLI delivering affordable batteries.
Battery Waste Management Rules End-of-life battery disposal regulation — necessary complement to domestic manufacturing.
India's NDCs and Net-Zero 2070 EV battery ecosystem is central to India's transport decarbonisation commitments.
China's dominance in clean tech supply chains Geopolitical context: China controls ~75% of global battery cell capacity — core to understanding import dependency.
Production Linked Incentive for Solar PV Modules Parallel case of import substitution PLI in clean energy; similar implementation challenges.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: Aspirants confuse MHI (implementing ministry) with MNRE (Ministry of New and Renewable Energy) or MoP (Ministry of Power). ACC PLI is under MHI.
  2. Confusing targets: The main target is 50 GWh + 5 GWh Niche — do not quote 55 GWh as a single figure without qualification.
  3. Mixing up PLI schemes: There are 14 PLI schemes; ACC PLI (₹18,100 crore) is distinct from PLI for White Goods, Solar PV, or Auto/Auto Components — which are also MHI schemes but with different outlays and targets.
  4. "Technology-specific" trap: The scheme is explicitly technology-agnostic — a common wrong option in MCQs that claim it is restricted to lithium-ion.
  5. Overstating awardee numbers: Originally 4 companies selected, but one (Rajesh Exports) effectively exited — current active awardees are fewer; Reliance joined later via a separate round.
  6. Confusing IEEFA with a government body: IEEFA is an independent research organisation, not a government/statutory body — facts from its 2026 report are analytical, not official government data.

11. Sources