Global Carmakers Pull Back From EVs After Big Losses, But India Is Just Getting Started

Over the past year, the global automotive industry has been forced into a hard reset on electric vehicles. Legacy carmakers have now booked more than $70 billion in EV-related write-downs, project cancellations, and restructuring charges as they try to stop the bleeding. Ford, General Motors, Stellantis, Honda and Porsche have all scaled back earlier electric plans, delayed products, or shifted spending toward hybrids and combustion vehicles.

So no electric future?

For buyers following the global auto industry, this looks like a dramatic reversal. A few years ago, these companies were talking about an almost fully electric future. Today, many of them are saying the transition will take longer, cost more, and need more than one technology path. But that does not mean the EV story is collapsing everywhere. It means the market is splitting.

The big losses for international car brands

The financial damage is no longer small. Ford alone has taken a $19.5 billion hit on EV investments. GM has announced a $6 billion charge to unwind some EV spending. Stellantis booked a massive 22.2-billion-euro write-down tied to its retreat from an overly aggressive EV strategy. Honda has flagged a 2.5 trillion yen, or about $15.7 billion, reassessment of its EV business. Porsche has also taken a heavy blow, with extraordinary charges of about 3.9 billion euros, including billions linked to its EV strategy reset. These are not normal course corrections. These are boardroom-level admissions that the original timeline was too optimistic.

Why the retreat? Because demand is no longer moving in one clean global direction. The broad long-term trend still favours electrification. Global electric car sales crossed 17 million in 2024, which pushed EVs above 20 percent of total new car sales worldwide. China alone sold more than 11 million electric cars last year, and electric cars accounted for almost half of all new car sales there. That is the headline many automakers used to justify huge spending.

BMW New Class EVs

EVs growing in some places, down in others

But the more recent monthly trend tells a messier story. In February 2026, global EV registrations fell 11 percent year on year to just over one million units. China, the world’s biggest EV market, saw a 32 percent drop for the month as subsidies and tax benefits faded. North America was down 35 percent. Europe, however, went the other way, rising 21 percent, while the rest of the world jumped 78 percent from a much smaller base. In other words, the EV slowdown is real, but it is not uniform. Some markets are pausing, while others are still expanding quickly.

EV policy confusion in the US

That unevenness is exactly why carmakers are changing course. In the United States, weaker policy support and charging anxiety have made it harder to sell expensive electric trucks and SUVs in mass numbers. In China, the pressure is different. There, local brands have pushed prices and development speed to levels many Western automakers simply cannot match. Chinese carmakers have cut development cycles dramatically and squeezed costs through vertical integration, modular platforms and simpler part counts. That has made the market brutally efficient and brutally unforgiving.

This is why several global brands are doing two opposite things at once. On one hand, they are cutting losses on old EV plans that were built for a different demand environment. On the other hand, they are still investing heavily in new EV technology because they know they cannot afford to fall permanently behind the Chinese.

Look at what is happening at the premium end. Mercedes-Benz’s new electric CLA is being quoted with a WLTP range of up to 792 km and the company says it can add roughly 201 miles of range in just 10 minutes on an 800-volt fast charger. BMW’s Neue Klasse architecture is targeting up to 805 km of range in concept form, while the upcoming iX3 based on that new-generation tech is being marketed with an estimated range of up to 400 miles. This is not retreat. This is escalation. The established luxury brands are chasing longer range, lower consumption and faster charging because that is now the level required to stay relevant.

Renault is pushing from another direction. It has openly said it wants to cut EV costs by 40 percent by 2030 and reduce parts count by about 30 percent on future models, effectively using Chinese-style simplicity as the benchmark. At the same time, Renault is not betting only on pure EVs. It is leaning more on hybrids in the near term and has said its next EV platform, due around 2028, will also support a range-extender version with a small engine acting as backup, stretching total range to as much as 1,400 km. That matters because it shows how the industry is no longer moving in one straight line from petrol to full battery electric. Strong hybrids, plug-in hybrids and range extenders are all back in the conversation.

Indian EV market showing no slowdown

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The local market fits into that global split in a very different way. Here, automakers are still in build-out mode. Running cost advantage matters more, average daily usage suits EVs better, and the product pipeline is only now filling out. Tata has made clear that the real battle is cost. The company has said it wants to get to landed-cost parity with Chinese EV makers within 12 to 18 months. It is also attacking the market from the bottom up. Tata says around 65 percent of the annual 4.6 million car market sits in the budget segment, where EV penetration is still only about 1.6 percent. That is why it is experimenting with battery-as-a-service pricing and pushing harder on charging access.

Charging is improving too. Tata has said it has tied up with charge point operators and oil marketing companies to support more than 22,000 charging points over the next 12 to 18 months. That does not solve everything overnight, but it shows why the local EV market still looks like an expansion story rather than a retreat story.

tata harrier ev

Regulation is another key reason. The upcoming CAFE 2027 rules, due to apply from April 2027 to March 2032, will tighten fleet efficiency targets and create credits for higher EV and plug-in hybrid sales. Penalties for non-compliance can go up to roughly $550 per vehicle. That means carmakers cannot simply walk away from electrification even if hybrids do more of the work in the short term. The compliance math is becoming tougher, not easier.

So the real story is not that the industry has given up on EVs. It is that the first phase of the EV race has ended. The era of easy promises, subsidy-fuelled forecasts and one-size-fits-all strategies is over. The next phase looks harsher and much more competitive. Some companies are cutting their losses. Some are doubling down with 800 km-class EVs. Some are chasing Chinese cost levels. Some are hedging with hybrids and range extenders. All of them are being forced to adapt.

That is why this moment matters. The retreat is real, but so is the next wave of competition. And that next wave may end up producing better EVs, cheaper EVs, and a far more mixed powertrain market than anyone was predicting two years ago.

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