“>
India is likely to propose a new draft of the Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE) norms, followed by final rules later this month.
The existing regulations, which allow small-car manufacturers higher emissions through a lower fuel-efficiency mandate, may be dropped. This has led to intense lobbying by aggrieved small-car makers that want the support to continue, said people familiar with the developments.
On Tuesday, domestic automobile majors held a meeting with the ministry of heavy industries, where Union Minister HD Kumaraswamy attempted to allay concerns.”A final notification of CAFE norms is likely by February-end,” an industry representative who attended Tuesday’s meeting told ET.
It is not immediately clear if the concerns of small-car makers will be addressed in the new draft. Kumaraswamy is said to have assured automobile companies that the new CAFE norms would not offer any undue favours or penalties.
Representatives from Tata, Hyundai, Suzuki, Mahindra, Honda, Kia, BMW, Mercedes, Toyota, JSW-MG, Renault, Nissan, and Skoda-VW, along with the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM), were present in the meeting. Officials from the Bureau of Energy Efficiency were also in attendance. “There were heated discussions between automobile companies during the meeting,” multiple players present said, noting that government representatives had to step in to defuse the commotion regarding whether to extend the concessions on small cars or not.Intense lobbying is underway within the domestic automobile industry, which has largely divided itself along the lines of big versus small-car manufacturers. Already, leading carmakers like Maruti Suzuki and Tata Motors are at odds over the proposed weight-based concessions for small cars in the third iteration of CAFE norms, which are set to come into force next year. While Maruti Suzuki has urged the government to relax emission norms for small cars – which are more fuel-efficient compared to larger vehicles and are important for increasing motorisation levels among entry-level consumers – others like Tata Motors have held that there is “absolutely no justification” for giving concessions to any category of cars in the upcoming norms.
Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals.
Subscribe to Newsletter to get latest insights & analysis in your inbox.
All about ETAuto industry right on your smartphone!
- Download the ETAuto App and get the Realtime updates and Save your favourite articles.


