Tesla to selling cars in India, starting at $69,770
India is the world's third largest car market, although electric vehicles comprise a very small slice, as concerns about easy accessibility of charging infrastructure deter many affluent buyers from going electric.
As Tesla gears up for busy roads still ruled by cars fueled by diesel and petrol, it will go head-to-head primarily with German luxury giants like BMW and Mercedes-Benz in the premium EV segment.
Among India's mass-market players are Tata Motors and Mahindra.
Police guarded the showroom, with the brand's name etched in black against a stark white wall, where the car, draped in black and grey covers was partially visible on Tuesday through the glass in a gated office complex.
With access tightly controlled, few onlookers or fans lingered near the premises.
Musk has long eyed an entry in India, the world's most populous country and where the rich are splurging on everything from apartments to watches and jewelry, even bathrooms.
India aims to boost the share of EVs in domestic car sales to 30 percent by 2030, from 4 percent now, offering tax cuts to foreign automakers committing to some domestic production.
That proved to have limited appeal to Musk, although the efforts were partly designed to lure Tesla.
Tesla's opening coincides with a pre-booking campaign in India launched by Vinfast for its electric sports utility vehicles VF7 and VF6.
Tesla is selling the Model Y rear-wheel drive for 6 million rupees ($70,000) in cash, and its Model Y long-range rear-wheel drive at 6.8 million ($79,000).
The US selling price starts from $44,990, while in China it is 263,500 yuan ($36,700) and in Germany 45,970 euros ($53,700).
($1=86.0020 rupees)
($1=7.1736 Chinese yuan renminbi)
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