Tesla Withdraws India Manufacturing Plans, Confirms End of Multi-Year Negotiations
Tesla Abandons India Factory Plans
In a dramatic reversal, Tesla has officially confirmed it will not build a manufacturing facility in India. The decision, announced by India’s Minister of Heavy Industries H.D. Kumaraswamy on May 19, ends nearly a decade of on-again, off-again negotiations with the Indian government.

“Tesla has communicated to us that they are dropping their plans for a local factory,” Kumaraswamy said in a statement. “We were ready to offer incentives, but the company cited uncertainty about market demand policy.”
Background
The U.S. electric vehicle giant entered talks with India in 2015. Over nine years, Tesla repeatedly pledged to invest billions—only to delay or back out.
Indian officials had hoped Tesla’s entry would boost EV adoption and create thousands of jobs. But high import tariffs and local sourcing rules became sticking points. Tesla demanded a 40% reduction in import duties on fully-built cars, which the government refused.
What This Means
India will now likely lose a marquee investment to support its goal of 30% EV sales by 2030. Domestic automakers like Tata Motors and Mahindra face less foreign competition but also lose the supply chain investment that Tesla would have brought.
“Tesla’s exit signals that India’s EV policies remain too protectionist for global players,” said Rajeev Singh, automotive analyst at IHS Markit. “Other manufacturers will watch this closely.”
Industry Reacts
The news sent TSLA shares up 0.3% in after-hours trading, as investors considered reduced capital expenditure. In India, the announcement disappointed workers in the planned factory region near Bengaluru.

“We were counting on those jobs,” said local union leader Prakash Shinde. “Now we see the consequences of policy inflexibility.”
What’s Next for Tesla
Tesla is focusing on expanding production in the U.S., Germany, and China. The company has halted all India-related hiring and will not open showrooms in the country as previously announced.
Analysts believe Tesla may still sell imported vehicles in India, but limited to a small niche due to 70-100% tariffs. CEO Elon Musk has not commented publicly since the announcement.
India’s EV Roadmap Under Scrutiny
India’s Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Electric Vehicles (FAME) scheme has struggled to attract big-ticket foreign investment. The Tesla failure puts pressure on the government to revise its tariff structure for EV makers.
“If India wants a Tesla factory, it must change its rules,” said Vikram Sharma, senior fellow at the Centre for Socio-Economic Policy. “Otherwise, it will lose the global EV race.”
Summary
After nine years of negotiations, Tesla officially abandons plans for an India factory. Government confirms decision, blaming policy uncertainty. Impact may reshape India's EV strategy.
Related Articles
- Unifying Flutter's Websites with Dart and Jaspr: A Q&A
- Why V8 Set Sail from the Sea of Nodes: 7 Key Reasons
- How to Turn Winter's Energy Challenges into Opportunities in Australia
- Farmers' Big Battery Project Gets Lightning-Fast Federal Environmental Nod
- Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (Supervised) Gains Limited Approval in Belgium
- Leaving the Sea of Nodes: V8's Shift to Turboshaft
- How to Prepare for the Future of Energy: Solar Dominance and Battery Storage by 2032
- Streamlining Dataset Migrations with Automated Agents: Spotify's Honk, Backstage, and Fleet Management