The soaring price of petrol in India has triggered an unexpected acceleration in electric vehicle adoption, creating a lucrative new market for British battery technology firms. With fuel costs rising over 15% in the past year, Indian consumers are pivoting to EVs faster than analysts predicted. This shift is not just a consumer trend but a geopolitical opportunity for UK-based battery innovators looking to expand beyond Europe.
India's electric car registrations surged 40% in the first quarter of 2024, compared to the same period last year, according to data from the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers. The catalyst is clear: petrol prices now average 110 rupees per litre, making the cost of running an ICE vehicle nearly twice that of an EV per kilometre. For a price-sensitive market like India, that arithmetic drives decisions.
Yet India's domestic battery production capacity remains nascent. The country's ambitious 'National Programme on Advanced Chemistry Cell' aims to build 50 GWh of battery storage by 2030, but current output is minimal. This gap is where UK firms see their opening. British battery tech companies, from Oxfordshire-based start-ups to established players like Britishvolt, are now actively courting Indian automakers and energy firms.
"India is where the volume is," says Dr. Priya Sharma, an energy analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "But the technology edge remains with the UK, especially in solid-state batteries and recycling processes. The challenge is scaling production costs to Indian price points. If UK firms can crack that, they'll dominate."
UK Trade and Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch recently led a delegation of 12 battery tech firms to Delhi, promising "a new era of clean energy partnership." The visit resulted in two memorandum of understanding between UK cell manufacturers and Indian automotive groups, including Tata Motors. The specifics are confidential, but sources indicate they involve joint ventures for localised production.
However, the ethical implications of this transfer are not lost on critics. "We cannot simply export our battery problems," warns environmental journalist Rohan Gupta. "Mining lithium in Chile, processing it in China, assembling in the UK, then shipping to India creates a carbon footprint that undermines the very green promise of EVs. We need a circular economy, not linear exploitation."
The UK government has positioned battery technology as a pillar of its net-zero strategy, with the Faraday Institution investing £330 million in research. But with domestic demand for EVs in the UK softening due to high electricity prices, firms are increasingly looking abroad. India, with its 1.4 billion population and rapidly growing middle class, offers a scale that the UK cannot match.
This export focus aligns with India's push for 'Atmanirbhar Bharat' (self-reliant India), but with a twist: self-reliance through foreign partnerships. The Indian government recently reduced import duties on battery components to 5%, down from 15%, explicitly to attract foreign technology. The message is clear: bring your intellectual property, manufacture here, share the gains.
For UK firms, the risk is losing control of proprietary tech. Indian companies have a reputation for reverse-engineering and indigenising foreign innovations. But the potential reward is enormous. A McKinsey report estimates India's battery market will be worth $15 billion by 2030, driven by EV adoption and grid storage for renewable energy.
"The window is two to three years," says Julian Vane, Technology & Innovation Lead. "If UK firms don't move fast, Chinese companies will fill the gap. They already dominate battery supply chains globally. India is the last big prize."
Indeed, Chinese battery giants CATL and BYD are already in talks with Indian partners. Their advantage is cost; their disadvantage is geopolitical wariness. India's border tensions with China have led to restrictions on Chinese investments, creating a unique opening for UK firms.
As I write this, I cannot ignore the digital sovereignty angle. An EV is a connected device, streaming data to manufacturers and insurers. If that data flows to UK servers, who governs it? The Indian government is drafting a data protection bill that may require localisation of all vehicle data. UK firms must navigate this regulatory minefield with transparency and ethics at the core.
In the end, this is not just about selling batteries. It is about shaping the user experience of an entire society in transition. If we do it right, the Indian EV boom could be a model for sustainable mobility worldwide. If we do it wrong, it becomes another chapter of resource colonialism. The choice is ours.









