India’s electric vehicle revolution is accelerating faster than many predicted, but the country’s ambitious push towards electrification is hitting a familiar roadblock: battery technology. While the Indian government has announced generous subsidies and targets for electric car adoption, the nation’s battery manufacturing infrastructure remains underdeveloped, raising concerns about supply chain vulnerabilities and performance in extreme climates.
As temperatures in India regularly exceed 40 degrees Celsius, battery degradation becomes a critical issue. Lithium-ion batteries, the current industry standard, struggle with heat management, leading to reduced range and shorter lifespans. Moreover, India’s reliance on imported cells, primarily from China, poses geopolitical risks and hampers the government’s “Make in India” initiative. The country needs a homegrown battery ecosystem, but building one from scratch is a costly, slow process.
Enter the United Kingdom. British firms are quietly pioneering next-generation battery technologies that could solve India’s energy storage dilemmas. Startups like Nyobolt and Faradion have developed ultra-fast charging lithium-ion batteries and sodium-ion alternatives that are more heat-tolerant, sustainable, and safer. These innovations are not just lab experiments; they are being commercialised with partnerships in the UK’s gigafactory network.
What makes UK technology particularly fitting for India is its focus on real-world usability. For instance, Nyobolt’s batteries can charge to 80% capacity in under six minutes without overheating, addressing a key pain point for Indian consumers who fear long charging times. Meanwhile, sodium-ion batteries, which avoid scarce materials like lithium and cobalt, are inherently safer and operate efficiently in high temperatures. This aligns with India’s need for affordable, domestically producible energy storage.
The UK’s strength lies not only in hardware but also in software. British companies are developing digital twins and AI-driven battery management systems that optimise performance and predict failure. These systems can be tailored to Indian driving conditions, from stop-start urban traffic to dusty highways, ensuring longevity. The UK’s academic institutions, such as the Faraday Institution, are deeply involved in battery research, creating a pipeline of talent and patents.
However, technology transfer alone is not enough. India must build a robust regulatory framework to encourage local manufacturing and recycling. The UK’s experience with the Advanced Propulsion Centre and the Automotive Transformation Fund offers lessons in public-private collaboration. Indian policymakers could adopt similar models to de-risk investments in battery plants and create a circular economy for materials.
There is also a geopolitical dimension. As the West seeks to reduce dependency on Chinese supply chains, India and the UK can forge a strategic alliance. Britain, post-Brexit, is eager to forge trade deals and showcase its tech leadership. India, aiming to become a global manufacturing hub, can leverage British innovation to leapfrog into next-gen batteries. Joint ventures in gigafactories could serve both domestic markets and export demands.
Yet, we must ask: does this technological handover create a new dependency on the West? India’s digital sovereignty requires that it doesn’t just import finished products but absorbs the underlying knowledge. The UK should share intellectual property and co-develop open standards, ensuring India can iterate and improve upon the technology. Otherwise, we risk replicating the colonial pattern of raw materials vs. finished goods.
The user experience of society here is paramount. For an Indian family, an electric car must be as convenient and affordable as a petrol vehicle. Battery swaps, charging infrastructure, and grid stability are all part of the equation. UK tech can be a catalyst, but only if adapted to local conditions.
India’s electric car boom will succeed or fail based on battery innovation. The UK has the tools, but the question is whether both nations can collaborate ethically and effectively. If they do, India can electrify its roads without sacrificing its environment or sovereignty. If they don’t, the boom may go bust.









