Polaris India to start full-fledged CKD operations in 3-5 years

The ATV market in India, at 1,000-1,200 units a year, is not big yet. Pankaj Dubey, managing director, Polaris India, is bullish though that the market will grow significantly in the coming years.

Sumantra B Barooah By Sumantra B Barooah calendar 23 Jun 2016 Views icon10940 Views Share - Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to LinkedIn Share to Whatsapp

An off-road track in a 5-acre property in suburban Mumbai called Tao Experiences at Roaring Farms became the 54th 'Polaris Experience Zone' in India on Thursday.

Such experience zones offering rides in Polaris All Terrain Vehicles (ATVs) constitute the largest customer group for Polaris India, followed by individual customers and government establishments.

The ATV market in India, at 1,000-1,200 units a year, is not big yet. Pankaj Dubey, managing director, Polaris India (pictured below), is bullish though that the market will grow significantly in the coming years. And that's when Polaris will invest in a full-fledged CKD  assembly facility in India. "For CKD, we think the volumes have to be 2-3 times of what we are doing right now. It seems to me that it will take about 3 years or so of the models that we are getting from US," Dubey told Autocar Professional.

web-ppc-5924

It is to be noted that Polaris India has started assembling a 150cc go-kart like ATV called Hammerhead which it imports from China. Polaris Industries acquired HH Investment, the maker of Hammerhead, last year. This acquisition is aimed at tapping price-sensitive markets like India. The Hammerhead is priced at Rs 2.85 lakh, nearly half of the entry-level price of Polaris' ATV portfolio.

Polaris and Suzuki (which entered the Indian ATV market last year) are the only global brands available here. Growing acceptance of ATVs and entry of more players will provide the economy of scale for Polaris to seriously 'Make in India'. Dubey says, "The industry size of 4,000-5,000 a year is when it would make us an interesting company to invest into this.  That is what at the minimum is what we are looking at." The groundwork for the local assembly/production is already happening though. Polaris Industries has an international purchase office (IPO) in Chennai. The vendor base meeting Polaris' global production specifications is "growing". "That will create the future ground for us to get some components also here. It doesn't make sense to import all components and assemble here," says Dubey. 

Polaris India has a land parcel of around an acre in Faridabad which houses one of its 3 warehouses and the small facility to assemble the Hammerhead ATV. Fresh investment will be made to set up a plant to locally assemble/produce Polaris models.

Going road legal

ATVs are not road legal in India. A green signal by the government authorities could lead to exponential growth in that market. Polaris has held discussions with government authorities but approval is still some time away. "There have been mixed reactions from the government. There has been no concrete proposal or finalisation. I am hoping that as some point of time they approve that," says Dubey. Polaris being the sole player in the negotiations is not helping much. Entrance of more players into the market and then approaching the government as a group will perhaps make the difference.

RELATED ARTICLES
Ford to build more EV software capability at Chennai tech hub

auther Autocar Pro News Desk calendar24 Apr 2024

Ford Business Solutions India, which currently employs 12,000 personnel set to add 3,000 more; Ford, which is known to b...

ASK Automotive to set up JV with Aisin to sell aftermarket parts for cars

auther Autocar Pro News Desk calendar24 Apr 2024

Ask Automotive will have 51% of the equity of the joint venture to be set up with Aisin Asia (Thailand) Company and Aisi...

Kia Carens gets 3-star Global NCAP rating in fresh tests

auther Autocar Pro News Desk calendar24 Apr 2024

The Carens MPV, which was tested twice under the new protocol, scored zero stars for adult occupancy in the first test.