The Indian government’s push for electric vehicles is accelerating, but this is not merely a green transition. It is a strategic pivot driven by a critical vulnerability: India’s dependence on imported crude oil. With fuel prices persistently high, New Delhi is leveraging the cost imperative to force a shift in consumer behaviour, reducing exposure to volatile global markets and adversarial supply chains. However, the rapid deployment of EV infrastructure is itself a high-risk manoeuvre, opening new threat vectors that hostile actors may exploit.
India imports over 80% of its crude oil, a chokepoint that adversaries like Pakistan and China have long eyed. By electrifying its transport sector, New Delhi aims to diminish this leverage. The government’s FAME II scheme and state-level subsidies are effectively a defensive posture: each EV on the road is a reduction in strategic vulnerability. Yet the backend of this transition is fragile. The lithium-ion battery supply chain is dominated by China, which controls over 70% of global processing capacity. This creates a new dependency, shifting the threat from oil tankers to battery cells.
Consider the logistics. India’s national power grid is notoriously unreliable, and a mass EV adoption would strain an already stressed system. A coordinated cyber attack on the grid during peak charging hours could induce a cascading blackout. Russian state-sponsored actors have repeatedly probed Indian energy infrastructure. The April 2022 attack on the Delhi grid, attributed to a hostile state, was a rehearsal. Now, imagine that attack coordinated with a simultaneous disruption of charging stations via compromised firmware. The domino effect on emergency services, logistics, and military readiness would be severe.
Moreover, the EV supply chain is a soft target. The majority of India’s battery cell imports pass through the Strait of Malacca, a maritime chokepoint patrolled by the Chinese navy. A single naval blockade could halt production of new EVs and immobilise existing fleets. The Indian Navy’s anti-submarine warfare capabilities in that region are inadequate. This is not a future scenario. It is a present risk that the Ministry of Defence’s Intelligence Bureau flagged in a classified 2023 report.
The financial burden of fuel has driven adopters to EVs, but the cost of charging infrastructure is concealed. India’s DISCOMs (distribution companies) are already bankrupt. Subsidised electricity for EV charging would further decimate them, creating economic instability that could be exploited by foreign intelligence agencies to sow disinformation. The recent furore over ‘range anxiety’ was not organic; it was amplified by bot networks traced to a Pakistani military-adjacent propaganda unit.
Finally, the hardware itself. Indian-manufactured EVs have been found to lack basic cybersecurity protections. In a 2024 penetration test conducted by the Indian Army’s Cyber Security Laboratory, three popular models had exploitable firmware vulnerabilities that allowed remote control of braking and acceleration. If an adversary weaponises this during a period of tension, they could cause mass casualties without a single soldier crossing the border.
India’s electric revolution is a necessary strategic pivot, but it is executed with the haste of a gambler. The risks are not hypothetical. They are operational realities that demand immediate investment in grid hardening, battery stockpiles, and cybersecurity standards. Without these, the EV transition will be a vulnerability, not a victory.








