Freight Electrification

Electric Truck Total Cost of Ownership: The PM e-DRIVE Numbers That Actually Matter for Industrial Fleet Operators | Reclimatize.in

PM e-DRIVE subsidises the purchase price of electric heavy trucks, but fleet operators make decisions on total cost of ownership over a vehicle’s life. At Rs 87.67/litre diesel and Rs 8–12/unit for commercial EV charging, the TCO crossover for heavy electric trucks sits at 250,000–400,000 km of cumulative annual operation. For captive industrial fleets at steel plants, aluminium smelters, and cement complexes, which routinely log 150,000–300,000 km/vehicle/year, the numbers are approaching parity faster than the market expects.

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India’s Coastal Shipping and Inland Waterways: The Third Modal Option for Industrial Freight | Reclimatize.in

India’s coastal shipping segment moves approximately 80 million tonnes annually, approximately 5–7% of total freight. Inland waterways move approximately 100 million tonnes, primarily on NW-1 (Ganga), NW-2 (Brahmaputra), and NW-16 (Barak). At Rs 0.80–1.20/tkm, coastal shipping is the cheapest freight mode per tonne-kilometre for any coastal route above 800 km. For industrial clusters near rivers or ports — Odisha aluminium and steel, West Bengal and UP Ganga-connected industry, Maharashtra coastal chemicals, this mode is comprehensively under-used relative to its cost and carbon potential.

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Coastal Shipping and Inland Waterways: India’s Forgotten Freight Decarbonisation Option | Reclimatize.in

India’s coastal shipping sector is chronically underutilised relative to its potential — carrying approximately 12–13% of India’s freight tonne-kilometres despite covering 7,516 km of coastline and connecting every major industrial cluster to every major port. Inland waterways, particularly National Waterway 1 on the Ganga, are operational but underused for industrial bulk freight. Both modes emit approximately 10–15 gCO₂/tkm — comparable to electrified rail and 7–9× lower than diesel road freight. For industrial shippers adjacent to coast or river systems, these are the lowest-carbon freight options available without infrastructure investment.

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India’s Dedicated Freight Corridor: The Operating Cost Case for Modal Shift Under CCTS | Reclimatize.in

The WDFC is complete as of 31 March 2026. Rail freight costs Rs 1.50–1.80 per tonne-km against Rs 2.50–3.00 by road — a 48% structural cost advantage before carbon is priced at all. At Rs 87.67/litre diesel and Brent at $118/barrel, that gap is wider today than at any point in the DFC’s operational history. This article builds the full financial case for modal shift, calculates the carbon cost differential, and explains what CCTS means for logistics operators that move steel, aluminium, fertiliser and container freight across India’s two most congested freight corridors.

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Rail Versus Road Modal Shift: The Decision Framework for India’s Industrial Shippers | Reclimatize.in

At current diesel prices, Indian Railways electrified freight at Rs 1.50–1.80/tkm beats diesel road at Rs 2.80–3.80/tkm on haul distances above 400 km. Below 400 km, the calculus flips. For industrial shippers in steel, aluminium, and fertilisers, the modal shift decision is not about national averages — it is about specific route lengths, cargo characteristics, terminal access, and CCTS Scope 1 boundary implications. This article builds the decision framework.

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India’s Dedicated Freight Corridors: Economics and Carbon Case for Steel, Aluminium, Fertiliser | Reclimatize.in

India’s Eastern and Western Dedicated Freight Corridors are fully operational. At current diesel prices of Rs 87.67/litre, the landed freight cost for electrified DFC rail is Rs 1.50–1.80 per tonne-kilometre versus Rs 2.80–3.80 per tonne-kilometre for diesel road. For the steel, aluminium, and fertiliser industries that collectively move hundreds of millions of tonnes annually, this cost gap is transformative and the carbon intensity gap of 101 gCO₂/tkm (road) versus 11.5 gCO₂/tkm (electrified rail) is even larger.

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India’s Electric Truck Transition for Industrial Captive Fleets | Reclimatize.in

India’s 12 million diesel trucks consume 55% of national diesel demand and cost approximately $50 billion per year in fuel — a macroeconomic vulnerability that has been brought into sharp relief by the West Asia energy disruption of 2026. Over the past decade, the energy cost trajectories of diesel and electricity have fundamentally diverged: diesel has risen 69% from Rs 53/L to Rs 90/L, while solar tariffs have fallen 47% and Li-ion battery costs have dropped 70%. India’s heavy-duty electric truck market is now entering a breakout phase — registrations grew 290% year-on-year from 201 units in FY2024-25 to 784 units in FY2025-26, concentrated in closed-loop industrial applications including cement, mining, ports, and bulk freight. On high-utilisation routes above 10,000 km per month, electric trucks already achieve approximately 24% lower total cost of ownership than diesel alternatives. For India’s industrial sector — steel, aluminium, fertiliser, and cement plants operating large captive truck fleets for raw material and finished goods logistics — the EV freight transition is now both commercially viable for specific routes and strategically important for CBAM embedded emission calculations, where verified transport emissions affect the carbon cost on EU exports. This article maps the full EV freight economics for industrial captive fleets: TCO by segment, the energy cost divergence, which use cases work today versus 2028-2030, the CBAM and CCTS Scope 3 interaction, and the transition strategy that delivers the fastest return on fleet electrification investment.

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India’s Dedicated Freight Corridors: Economics and Carbon Case | Reclimatize.in

On 31 March 2026, DFCCIL completed the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor’s final 102 km section, making the full 2,843 km electrified DFC network operational. With rail costing Rs 1.96 per tonne-km against road’s Rs 3.78 and emitting 89% less CO₂ per tonne-km than trucks, the corridors represent India’s most consequential freight decarbonisation infrastructure and the most credible answer to the country’s
7.97% of GDP logistics cost burden.

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