Getting the two-wheeler math right
The total cost of owning an e-2w is much lower than that of a conventional two-wheeler. Hero Electric’s Munjal makes a strong case for e-2w and does some number crunching of the TCO (total cost of ownership) of these two segments. Let’s say you do 40 km a day using an IC (Internal Combustion) engine vehicle that uses one litre of fuel daily. If you look at a three-year period or 1,000 days of riding, you will spend Rs 90,000 on fuel at Rs 90 a litre. On top of that, you would have spent Rs 60,000 at one shot on buying the vehicle and Rs 500-1,000 a month on maintenance. An e-2W will cost you nearly the same upfront, and a fourth on maintenance. However, the biggest saving is the energy cost (fuel v/s electricity). If you are travelling 40 km per day on an e-2W with a 1.5Kwh battery, you are using only 1.5 units of power. Even at Rs 8 a unit, you are looking at spending only Rs 12,000 over that period of 1,000 days. So you save about Rs 80,000 over a three-year period. Munjal says his company has been able to bring down the price of an e-scooter to under Rs 60,000, while a bike running on petrol with a 100cc IC engine costs Rs 70,000-75,000. "The EV is now much cheaper, has very good performance, plus we offer a three-year warranty on battery, and five years on the vehicle," he adds.