India’s transition to electric mobility creates a decisive window to build an advanced domestic manufacturing ecosystem while safeguarding jobs and competitiveness across the auto-component supply chain. Climate Policy Initiative (CPI) assesses that micro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs), which act as the backbone of the automotive component industry, must rapidly upgrade their technology, processes, and skills to participate effectively in electric vehicle (EV) value chains. Yet they remain constrained by expensive capital, limited risk appetite, and uneven access to policy support. This analysis proposes the establishment of an Automotive Component Technology Upgradation Financing Facility (AC-TUFF) to catalyze affordable, patient capital and targeted technical assistance (TA) for MSMEs undertaking EV transition projects.
The EV market opportunity is large and time-sensitive. By FY2035, annual demand for key EV components in India—battery packs, motors, power electronics, and connectivity/control systems—could reach INR 3.86 lakh crore (USD 46.17 billion), with sizable domestic value addition potential. MSMEs can capture significant shares in lower capital expenditure and modular sub-segments (e.g., battery-pack assembly, housings, wiring harnesses, printed circuit board assembly for control systems) but require well-structured capital and de-risking instruments to overcome barriers to entry and scale. CPI estimates that Indian MSMEs will need a cumulative INR 55,000 crore (USD 6.6 billion) of targeted investment in FY2026–FY2035 to maintain current turnover shares as the industry pivots from internal combustion engine vehicles to EVs.
Capital availability is typically misaligned with the transition needs of smaller players. Private equity and venture capital favor late-stage, large-scale players and brand-visible original equipment manufacturers (OEMs). Only a marginal share of these funds supports early-stage research and development or new product development at the component tier. MSMEs with limited access to technology and a greater need for transition capital remain outside the focus of these funds. Traditional bank lending emphasizes backward-looking metrics, collateral, and narrow covenants that penalize firms during technology retooling and ramp-up. While existing enablers, such as credit guarantees, cluster programs, and mass-demand incentives, provide a foundation, there is now an opportunity to design purpose-built solutions that can support MSME retooling at the speed and scale required by the EV transition. However, the financial requirements of MSMEs undergoing a technological shift, such as the EV transition, demand a focused and purpose-built provision.
AC-TUFF addresses these structural gaps in financing the EV transition requirements of auto-component manufacturer (ACM) MSMEs. The proposed facility combines a tiered capital stack—senior commercial capital, concessional capital, and first-loss capital—with integrated technical assistance (TA). It operates through partner financial institutions via on-lending and credit guarantees, and it complements credit with TA for bankable project design, vendor selection, cost and quality optimization, and OEM-market linkage. A dual-credit enhancement—AC-TUFF first loss guarantees plus a ‘Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises’ second loss guarantee—and demand de-risking via OEM offtake can unlock systematic scale. AC-TUFF’s phased rollout—in tranches of 6, 18, and 60 months— aims to build a track record through pilots in high-density clusters and scale nationally upon portfolio validation.
The roadmap emphasizes technology and facility upgradation by enabling the flow of capital into the ACM MSME ecosystem, supported by a system of calibrated eligibility criteria, financial risk mitigation, and transparency through a fit-for-purpose monitoring, reporting, and verification framework. It recommends tiered production-linked incentive (PLI) access for MSMEs, cluster-based common facilities, and structured partnerships with anchor OEMs and PLI champions to deepen technology diffusion. Designed as a revolving, market-building facility, AC-TUFF seeks to accelerate MSME competitiveness, expand localized EV manufacturing, and sustain jobs— advancing India’s industrial policy and climate objectives in lockstep.