<p>Bengaluru: India will need to keep subsidies for electric scooters for another few years to boost the switch from polluting motorbikes, the CEO of e-scooter maker Ather Energy told Reuters on Saturday.</p>.<p>Industry experts believe subsidies such as cash incentives are crucial to India hitting its goal of electrifying 70% of its two-wheeler fleet by 2030, as the world's third-largest importer of oil looks to reduce dependence on fossil fuels.</p>.<p>"We've been able to cut down a lot of subsidy reliance, but it's also come at the cost of almost a year's worth of lost growth," Ather CEO and co-founder Tarun Mehta said in an interview.</p>.<p>Mehta was referring to the government's surprise decision in May to slash cash incentives for e-scooters to a maximum of 15% of the purchase price before tax from 40% previously.</p>.E-scooter maker Ather says high costs pushing back profit timeline.<p>India's e-scooter market is small but growing, accounting for 5% of total two-wheeler sales in fiscal 2023-2024.</p>.<p>Ather was one of the first to drive the pick-up in adoption with the launch of its 450 series of e-scooters in 2018, but has fallen behind larger rivals Ola Electric and TVS Motor, whose discounts have driven sales.</p>.<p>Ather, which counts India's biggest two-wheeler maker Hero MotoCorp as its largest investor, launched a new, "family-friendly" e-scooter called "Rizta" on Saturday, priced at 109,999 rupees ($1,321).</p>.<p>The scooter has a larger seat and storage space compared with rivals. Mehta hopes it will attract a wider range of buyers in India's populous north and west regions, helping boost sales.</p>.<p>Loss-making Ather is focusing on top-line growth, Mehta said, but added margins would improve if sales volumes were higher.</p>.<p>"We haven't broken even yet, I think there's still a journey, hopefully it's not very long. Hopefully the Rizta plays a meaningful role because I am happy in how margins are shaping up at a unit level," he said, without giving details.</p>
<p>Bengaluru: India will need to keep subsidies for electric scooters for another few years to boost the switch from polluting motorbikes, the CEO of e-scooter maker Ather Energy told Reuters on Saturday.</p>.<p>Industry experts believe subsidies such as cash incentives are crucial to India hitting its goal of electrifying 70% of its two-wheeler fleet by 2030, as the world's third-largest importer of oil looks to reduce dependence on fossil fuels.</p>.<p>"We've been able to cut down a lot of subsidy reliance, but it's also come at the cost of almost a year's worth of lost growth," Ather CEO and co-founder Tarun Mehta said in an interview.</p>.<p>Mehta was referring to the government's surprise decision in May to slash cash incentives for e-scooters to a maximum of 15% of the purchase price before tax from 40% previously.</p>.E-scooter maker Ather says high costs pushing back profit timeline.<p>India's e-scooter market is small but growing, accounting for 5% of total two-wheeler sales in fiscal 2023-2024.</p>.<p>Ather was one of the first to drive the pick-up in adoption with the launch of its 450 series of e-scooters in 2018, but has fallen behind larger rivals Ola Electric and TVS Motor, whose discounts have driven sales.</p>.<p>Ather, which counts India's biggest two-wheeler maker Hero MotoCorp as its largest investor, launched a new, "family-friendly" e-scooter called "Rizta" on Saturday, priced at 109,999 rupees ($1,321).</p>.<p>The scooter has a larger seat and storage space compared with rivals. Mehta hopes it will attract a wider range of buyers in India's populous north and west regions, helping boost sales.</p>.<p>Loss-making Ather is focusing on top-line growth, Mehta said, but added margins would improve if sales volumes were higher.</p>.<p>"We haven't broken even yet, I think there's still a journey, hopefully it's not very long. Hopefully the Rizta plays a meaningful role because I am happy in how margins are shaping up at a unit level," he said, without giving details.</p>