New Delhi, Jul 23 (PTI) India’s automobile industry could cut its manufacturing emissions by as much as 87 per cent by 2050 by shifting to green electricity and low-carbon steel, according to a new study by the think-tank Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW).
The study comes as several leading automakers such as Mahindra & Mahindra, Tata Motors, TVS Motors, Ford, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and Toyota have, over the past two years, ramped up electric and hybrid vehicle production while simultaneously setting ambitious emission reduction targets.
These automakers have also committed to the Science-Based Targets initiative (SBTi), aligning with global definitions of net-zero that require full value-chain decarbonisation by 2050.
For large Indian auto manufacturers, cleaning up supply chains will not just lower emissions, it will enhance long-term cost competitiveness and position them as preferred international suppliers, the study said.
While many of these targets focus on direct factory emissions and downstream use-phase emissions, upstream supply chain emissions remain largely overlooked, despite contributing to the majority of the sector’s carbon footprint.
The CEEW study tracks emissions across three scopes: direct emissions from vehicle manufacturing (Scope 1), indirect emissions from electricity use (Scope 2), and upstream supply chain emissions (Scope 3).
Scope 3 emissions currently make up over 83 per cent of the auto industry’s emissions in India, largely due to the use of coal-intensive steel and rubber in vehicle manufacturing.
Dr Arunabha Ghosh, the CEO of CEEW, said, “India’s auto industry stands at a turning point. To lead in a low-carbon global economy, we must decarbonise not just the vehicles we drive but the industrial processes that build them. Automakers must clean up how their vehicles are made, what powers their factories, and how their suppliers produce critical inputs like steel and rubber.” This is not new. Most major manufacturers in India are already thinking about these shifts.
Now, the push must be to create demand for green materials at scale, lower costs, and deploy cleaner technologies rapidly, Ghosh said, adding the auto sector can emerge as a force multiplier for economy-wide net-zero transitions but only through collective foresight, investment and innovation.
The CEEW study uses a custom version of the Global Change Analysis Model to project emissions from India’s vehicle manufacturing sector under various pathways.
It found that if the current business-as-usual trends continue, annual vehicle production could rise nearly fourfold, from 25 million units in 2020 to 96 million by 2050.
Emissions, however, would only double, reaching 64 million tonnes of CO2 (carbon dioxide), suggesting a steady decline in emissions per vehicle. Still, the absolute rise in emissions underscores the need for accelerated action.
According to the study, steel alone would remain the largest source of supply chain emissions, with suppliers expected to rely heavily on coal in this business-as-usual (BAU) scenario.
The study estimates that sourcing low-carbon steel could reduce emissions by nearly 38 million tonnes by 2050. Green electricity and green steel are essential for deep decarbonisation.
If both OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) and their suppliers were to aim for net-zero by 2050, annual emissions could fall from the projected 64 MtCO2 (metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent) (BAU) to just 9 MtCO2 — an 87 per cent reduction.
This would require OEMs to shift to 100 per cent green electricity sourced through power purchase agreements, renewable energy certificates, or captive solar, and steel suppliers to use 56 per cent hydrogen-based energy, reducing coal’s share to under 10 per cent.
In addition, increasing scrap-based steel production to 48 per cent by 2050 would significantly reduce emissions and resource intensity.
The CEEW study also highlighted that rubber suppliers must transition to green electricity to clean up Scope 2 emissions.
Dr Vaibhav Chaturvedi, Senior Fellow, CEEW, said, “To align India’s automobile sector — central to GDP, jobs, and industrial growth — with a net-zero future, we must go beyond electrifying vehicles. We must decarbonise manufacturing itself.” “Leading OEMs are already making corporate decisions to stay ahead by decarbonising their operations and supply chains. What’s needed now is strong procurement intent, especially through advanced market commitments to secure green steel and other low-carbon materials,” he said.
The CEEW study also examined a high-hybrid scenario, where hybrids dominate in the near term before EVs take off. While this reduces energy demand among component suppliers by 7 per cent, emissions remain slightly higher than in a BAU shift to EVs due to continued reliance on combustion engines.
Ultimately, hybrid vehicles are at best a bridge and will need to be reduced to make way for zero-carbon vehicles.
To align the automobile sector with a 2050 net-zero pathway, the CEEW study recommended a two-pronged strategy: accelerate the transition to electric vehicles and decarbonise the full manufacturing value chain.
Since 65–80 per cent of a vehicle’s lifetime emissions come from its use phase, shifting to EVs remains the most effective way to cut end-use emissions. But deep reductions will only be possible if EVs are manufactured using clean energy and low-carbon materials.
This requires coordinated action across OEMs and suppliers supported by long-term procurement commitments and policy signals that encourage investments, the study said. PTI UZM UZM NSD NSD
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