Chinese EV makers are shut out of India - but their technology isn’t

Good — I now have sufficient grounded facts from Tier 1 sources. Compiling the full study note below.


Chinese EV Makers Are Shut Out of India — But Their Technology Isn't

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-III / GS-II


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
April 2020 Press Note 3 (2020) issued: all FDI from land-border-sharing countries (China, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar) requires prior Government approval (moved from automatic to government route). Enforced via FEMA (Non-Debt Instruments) Amendment Rules, 2020 dated 22.04.2020. [S1]
May 2020 Trigger: Galwan Valley border clash (June 2020) between Indian and Chinese troops; India ramps up scrutiny of Chinese businesses. [S4]
2021–23 India bans hundreds of Chinese apps; Chinese FDI proposals face prolonged review; Chinese automakers (BYD, SAIC/MG Motor, Great Wall) effectively frozen out of new equity entry. [S4]
March 2024 India notifies Scheme to Promote Manufacturing of Electric Passenger Cars in India (SPMEPCI) — targets global EV manufacturers willing to invest ≥ ₹4,150 crore (USD 500 mn) with domestic value addition of 25% in 3 years, 50% in 5 years. [S5]
2025 Beijing restricts export of EV technology know-how amid US-China tariff war, further complicating formal tech-transfer deals for Indian firms. [S4]
June 2025 Tata-Chery and JSW-Chery supply deals announced; Amara Raja-Gotion deal collapses. [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

FDI Policy — Press Note 3 (2020) - Issued: 17 April 2020 by DPIIT (Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade). [S1] - Applies to: entities from countries sharing land border with India — China, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar. - Mechanism: FDI shifted from automatic route → government route (prior approval mandatory). - Extended to: any ownership transfer that results in beneficial ownership falling within the restricted category. [S1] - Implementing instrument: FEMA (Non-Debt Instruments) Amendment Rules, 2020 — notified 22 April 2020. [S1] - 2026 update: Cabinet approved further changes to guidelines on investments from land-border-sharing countries. [S2]

EV Policy Framework - PLI Scheme — Automobile & Auto Components: Outlay ₹25,938 crore; FY 2023-24 to FY 2027-28; incentives 13–18% for EV/Hydrogen Fuel Cell components, 8–13% for other AAT components. [S6] - SPMEPCI (Scheme to Promote Manufacturing of Electric Passenger Cars in India): Notified 15 March 2024 by Ministry of Heavy Industries (MHI); minimum investment ₹4,150 crore (USD 500 mn); 25% DVA in 3 years, 50% DVA in 5 years; application portal opened 24 June 2025. [S5] - PM E-DRIVE Scheme (PM Electric Drive Revolution in Innovative Vehicle Enhancement): Outlay ₹10,900 crore; implementation period 1 April 2024 – 31 March 2026. [S7] - PLI Scheme — Advanced Chemistry Cell (ACC) Batteries: Outlay ₹18,100 crore; target domestic capacity of 50 GWh. [S6] - FAME Scheme (Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of (Hybrid and) Electric Vehicles): demand-side incentive for EV adoption. [S6] - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Heavy Industries (MHI) for SPMEPCI and PLI-Auto; NITI Aayog as policy architect.


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Scientific / Technological

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative

Environmental


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Press Note 3 (2020) was issued on 17 April 2020 by DPIIT; enforced via FEMA (Non-Debt Instruments) Amendment Rules, 2020 dated 22 April 2020. [S1]
  2. Press Note 3 applies to FDI from all countries sharing a land border with India — not just China (also covers Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar). [S1]
  3. Press Note 3 moves such FDI from the automatic route to the government (approval) route. [S1]
  4. SPMEPCI was notified on 15 March 2024 by the Ministry of Heavy Industries. [S5]
  5. Minimum investment under SPMEPCI: ₹4,150 crore (USD 500 million) within 3 years. [S5]
  6. SPMEPCI requires Domestic Value Addition (DVA) of 25% in 3 years and 50% in 5 years. [S5]
  7. PLI Scheme for Automobile & Auto Components has an outlay of ₹25,938 crore covering FY 2023-24 to FY 2027-28. [S6]
  8. EV/Hydrogen Fuel Cell components under PLI-Auto attract incentives of 13–18% (higher than 8–13% for other AAT components). [S6]
  9. PM E-DRIVE Scheme outlay: ₹10,900 crore; period: 1 April 2024 to 31 March 2026. [S7]
  10. PLI for ACC batteries targets 50 GWh domestic capacity with an outlay of ₹18,100 crore. [S6]
  11. Amara Raja halted its tech partnership with China's Gotion High-Tech following Beijing's 2025 technology export restrictions. [S4]
  12. Tata Motors' deal with Chery explicitly involves no equity stake and no technology transfer — only a supply/platform arrangement. [S4]
  13. India is the world's third-largest car market. [S4]
  14. The Galwan Valley clash occurred in June 2020 and directly triggered India's tightening of scrutiny over Chinese business investments. [S4]
  15. SPMEPCI application portal opened on 24 June 2025. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Indian Economy — Industrial Policy; Infrastructure; Technology and R&D; Manufacturing; Make in India
GS-III Internal Security / Strategic Affairs — External state actors and threats to internal security (economic dimension)
GS-II International Relations — India-China bilateral relations; Bilateral groupings and agreements

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "India's FDI restrictions on Chinese investments under Press Note 3 (2020) have failed to prevent Chinese technology from entering the Indian EV sector through supply-chain arrangements. Critically examine." (GS-III / GS-II)

  2. "Analyse the strategic dilemma India faces in building a competitive EV manufacturing ecosystem while reducing economic dependence on China. What policy instruments are available to the government?" (GS-III)

  3. "How have India's post-2020 FDI regulations affected bilateral economic relations with China? Discuss with reference to the automotive and battery storage sectors." (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Press Note 3 (2020) & FEMA Direct legal instrument governing the FDI restrictions discussed
India-China Border Disputes (LAC, Galwan 2020) Root cause triggering the economic decoupling policy
PLI Scheme — Automobiles & ACC Batteries Core industrial policy tool India is using to build domestic EV capacity
FAME I & II / PM E-DRIVE Scheme Demand-side EV policy; complements SPMEPCI supply-side push
Critical Minerals Mission / Battery Supply Chains Lithium, cobalt, nickel dependency — China controls ~70% of global battery refining
Make in India / Atma Nirbhar Bharat Overarching framework within which EV localisation goals sit
India-China Trade Data (2023–25) Despite restrictions, bilateral trade hit record levels — the broader "decoupling paradox"
WTO Rules on FDI Screening Whether land-border FDI rules are WTO-compliant; national security exceptions under GATS

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Press Note 3 vs. Press Note 4: Press Note 4 (2020) revised FDI policy in the Defence Sector — distinct from Press Note 3 which covers land-border FDI. Do not conflate them. [S1][S8]

  2. "Only China is covered" — WRONG: Press Note 3 covers all seven land-border-sharing nations (China, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Afghanistan — noting India-Afghanistan land border status is contested post-2021). Many candidates write only "China." [S1]

  3. SPMEPCI minimum investment: The threshold is ₹4,150 crore (USD 500 mn) — not ₹500 crore. Candidates conflate the rupee and dollar figures. [S5]

  4. PLI-Auto implementing ministry: Ministry of Heavy Industries (MHI) — not Ministry of Commerce, not NITI Aayog (which is advisory). [S5]

  5. Technology transfer vs. supply arrangement: The Tata-Chery deal does not involve technology transfer — it is a supply/platform deal. Treating supply deals as equivalent to tech transfer is both factually wrong and misses the key policy tension in this issue. [S4]


11. Sources