‘No’ BYD; ‘yes’ Tesla Goyal cites strategic interests to reject BYD bid to enter India once again

Blitz Bureau

NEW DELHI:India will restrict market access to BYD Co. even as it courts investments from US rival Tesla Inc., showing New Delhi’s lingering angst with China despite recent signs of a thaw in relationship. “India has to be cautious about its strategic interests, who we allow to invest,” Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal said last week. “As of now it is a no” to BYD, he told Bloomberg Television’s Haslinda Amin at the India Global Forum in Mumbai.

New Delhi had last year rejected BYD’s $1 billion investment proposal with a local partner, while another Chinese carmaker Great Wall Motor Co. also exited India after failing to secure regulatory clearances. Goyal’s statement comes on a day when US President Donald Trump threatened to slap additional 50 per cent import taxes on China if it doesn’t withdraw its planned retaliatory tariffs by April 8.

India’s hardline posture also highlights a broader protectionist approach to car imports. With a 100 per cent duty on fully built vehicles — by far the highest among major economies — India has long shielded domestic players with steep tariffs. But with free-trade talks with the US and European Union gathering pace, pressure is mounting to open up the world’s thirdlargest auto market to foreign players. “India has a lot of elbow room for trade deals with developed nations,” Goyal said, adding that the country will be cautious about “dumping” from China.

India has long shielded domestic players with steep tariffs. But with free-trade talks with the US and European Union gathering pace, pressure is mounting to open up the world’s third-largest auto market to foreign players

India wants to be a global hub for electric vehicle production but high entry barriers — compared to 2.5 per cent for US, 10 per cent in Germany, and up to 25 per cent in China — serve as a detriment. Tesla has stayed away from India citing high tariffs while BYD has struggled to secure investment clearances, even as demand surges for affordable EVs and compact SUVs priced below $25,000.

That’s where India’s homegrown automakers such as Tata Motors Ltd. and Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. thrive. The local automakers have resisted any tariff relaxation that might allow foreign rivals to undercut them on price, especially as the government ramps up incentives for EV production.

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