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The co-founder of the ride-hailing major also noted that India – with its unique skill sets and manpower – can be a bridge for developing paradigms and technologies for both developed and developing nations.
Speaking at a CII event, Aggarwal said there are four broad segments of vehicles, including large commercial vehicles (buses and trucks), western-style four-wheelers, Asian and European style four-wheelers (small city cars), and two and three-wheelers.
“Our ambition is to be the leader in electric mobility for the small vehicles and small city four-wheelers. And unlike Tesla or many of the American companies, which are building for their own audiences, we have to build for our audiences. India is the world’s largest two-wheeler market. Asia is 80-90 per cent of the global two-wheeler market,” he explained.
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According to sources, Ola is planning to foray into electric scooter manufacturing and plans to hit the market with its first vehicle in January next year.
The electric scooter, initially manufactured at a facility in the Netherlands, will be sold in India as well as Europe.
Ola, however, has not commented on the exact timeline for the launch of e-scooter.
In May this year, Ola Electric announced the acquisition of Amsterdam-based Etergo BV for an undisclosed amount. At that time, the firm had said it aimed to launch electric two-wheelers in India in 2021, and that the acquisition of Etergo further bolstered its engineering and design capabilities.
Aggarwal, speaking at the event, said he believes Ola will have an important role in the smaller four-wheeler segment, but did not provide specific details.
“…as and when we have more to say, we will share, but we are looking at the whole spectrum of electric mobility from a global perspective. And over the next few years, we will build across different vehicle segments,” he added.
He said Ola’s vision is to move mobility into a “more sustainable, accessible, connected future.”
“I believe we have the unique skill sets and unique talents and the India advantage to do that, because a lot of these paradigms for tomorrow if they have to be globally relevant, they have to be built in India because India is kind of a bridge between the developed world and the developing world,” he added.
Aggarwal further stated that aspects like India being a democracy and being largely an open market, the country can be a “bridge” for developing paradigms and technologies for both the worlds.
“Another advantage we have is Indian talent, which is very hardworking and very high quality. Our engineers and our teams and the general talent in India wants to create a difference and achieve a dream. I actually believe Indian businesses have such a strong advantage because of that,” he added.