Highlights
- Bajaj Auto's production of Chetak scooter and GoGo three-wheeler slashed by 50% due to China's rare earth magnet export restrictions.
- India imports nearly 100% of rare earth magnets, revealing a critical strategic vulnerability in its electric vehicle manufacturing ecosystem.
- The 'zero month' crisis highlights broader policy failures in developing domestic critical mineral and magnet production capabilities.
Rajiv Bajajโs comments in The Times of India (opens in a new tab) are anything but hyperbole. Faced with a chokehold on rare earth magnet supply from China, Bajaj Auto (opens in a new tab)โthe second-largest electric scooter manufacturer in Indiaโis bracing for a possible โzero monthโ in August. Production for its flagship Chetak scooter and GoGo three-wheeler has already been slashed by 50%.
This isnโt just a supply chain hiccup. Itโs a strategic vulnerability, laid bare.
Reality Check: Whatโs Verified
The core claimโthat China has curbed rare earth magnet exports and that Indian manufacturers are facing direct consequencesโis verifiable and well-documented. Since April, China has tightened controls on heavy rare earths like dysprosium and terbium, both essential for high-performance neodymium magnets used in EV drivetrains.
Bajaj Auto's rapid production falloff after depleting stockpiled components mirrors broader industry warnings. For India, which imports nearly 100% of its rare earth magnets (mostly from China), the impact was predictableโbut no less severe.
Rajiv Bajajโs statement that "there are no substitutes in the short term" is also accurate. Alternatives to high-performance RE magnets remain largely experimental or cost-prohibitive at scale.
Where the Article Glides Over
What TOI doesnโt dig into is why India, despite years of policy promises, still has no domestic rare earth magnet production. Nor does it press Bajaj Auto on contingency planning. Where are the backup suppliers in Japan, Vietnam, or the U.S.? Has Indiaโs critical mineral diplomacy with Australia or Canada borne fruit? These omissions matter.
The article also misses an opportunity to explore demand-side pain. What happens to Indiaโs EV targetsโand consumer confidenceโif one of its biggest players stalls in peak season?
Signal vs. Noise
The good news: Bajajโs public disclosure is a rare moment of candor from an industry often allergic to admitting overreliance on China. It could light a fire under India's stalled ambitions for its magnet supply chain. The bad news? That fire shouldโve been lit years ago.
Bottom Line
Rajiv Bajajโs warning is real, raw, and overdue. But this โzero monthโ is more than a factory pauseโitโs a policy failure, a geopolitical wake-up call, and a magnet for investor scrutiny.
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