Drive Forward: Careers in India’s Electric Vehicle Ecosystem

India’s electric vehicle revolution is creating new career opportunities for engineers, designers, and innovators. Learn where you fit in the EV ecosystem.
"Indian engineers exploring electric vehicle careers – battery, software, and infrastructure roles"

TIT Correspondent
info@impressivetimes.com

India is charging ahead into an electric vehicle (EV) revolution — and for engineers, it’s the beginning of an exciting, opportunity-filled era.

In 2024 alone, over 50% of three-wheelers, 5% of two-wheelers, and 2% of cars sold in India were electric. With a target of 80 million EVs on Indian roads by 2030, the sector is rapidly growing despite global slowdowns. EV sales in India grew by 20%, supported by strong government policies, increasing consumer demand, and a push for local manufacturing.

EV Growth: Powered by Policy and Investment

The EV battery market is projected to grow from US$ 16.77 billion in 2023 to US$ 27.70 billion by 2028, creating major opportunities in battery innovation, energy systems, and materials engineering.

India currently has only 12,000 public charging stations, but to meet demand by 2030, it must build around 1.32 million. This calls for large-scale infrastructure development, requiring the expertise of electrical, civil, and software engineers.

Government schemes such as FAME II and PM E-DRIVE are injecting over ₹20,000 crore into EV development. Meanwhile, private players and auto component makers have lined up ₹30,000 crore in investments for FY26. Add India’s strength as a cost-effective manufacturing hub and its push for 100% domestic production, and it’s clear: a massive wave of demand is sweeping across multiple engineering sectors.

Where the Jobs Are: Engineering Roles in EVs

Electrical & Electronics Engineering

Electrical engineers power the EV revolution. Roles span motor design, battery management systems (BMS), power converters, and wiring harnesses. As EVs grow more complex, skills in circuits, control systems, and high-voltage safety are in high demand.

Mechanical Engineering

Mechanical roles are evolving. Engineers now focus on lightweight chassis, thermal systems, aerodynamics, and electric powertrain integration. The goal: efficient, high-performance EVs that are safe and sustainable.

Battery Technology & Chemical Engineering

Batteries are the beating heart of EVs. Engineers work on lithium-ion cell chemistry, solid-state batteries, thermal control, and recycling technologies. As India ramps up domestic battery production, this field is booming.

Software & Embedded Systems

EVs are part-machine, part-software. Engineers skilled in embedded C, Python, IoT, machine learning, and cybersecurity are building smart dashboards, autonomous systems, and over-the-air update capabilities.

Civil & Power Systems Engineering

Building EV infrastructure — especially public chargers — needs civil engineers and power systems experts to ensure efficient, grid-friendly networks in urban and rural areas alike.

Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering

Engineers are needed to scale up EV manufacturing under the “Make in India” push. This includes automated assembly lines, lean production systems, and supply chain innovation.

Automotive Design & Human Factors

New EV designs mean rethinking everything from interior layouts to user interfaces. Engineers skilled in design thinking, user experience, and ergonomics are becoming increasingly valuable.

The EV sector blends mechanical, electrical, chemical, and digital engineering. To stay relevant, engineers must reskill and upskill:

  • Mechanical/Thermal: SolidWorks, CATIA, Ansys

  • Electrical/Electronics: MATLAB/Simulink, Power Electronics, BMS

  • Embedded Systems: Embedded C, Python, IoT, CAN protocols

  • Battery Engineering: Electrochemistry, cell design, thermal management

Platforms like Skill-Lync, NPTEL, and ISIE India offer industry-aligned training. Institutes such as IIT Madras and IISc Bengaluru are launching cutting-edge EV certifications and research programs.

Engineers who understand both technology and policy frameworks, who can rapidly prototype, and who build strong project portfolios — such as a DIY electric drivetrain or a regenerative braking simulation — will stand out.

Startups vs. Corporates

Startups

  • Fast-paced, high-impact, hands-on roles

  • Work on live prototypes, pitch to leadership directly

  • Ideal for self-driven, adaptable professionals

  • Downsides: high pressure, limited structure

Corporates

  • Structured growth, large-scale projects, global exposure

  • Strong mentorship and regulatory compliance training

  • Ideal for those seeking depth and long-term career stability

  • Downsides: slower innovation cycles, specialised roles

Both paths offer unique learning curves. Many professionals start in one and transition to the other as they grow. The key is to know your work style, risk appetite, and career goals.

India’s EV industry is not just growing — it’s transforming the future of mobility. For engineers, this is the time to rethink your career trajectory, upgrade your skills, and seize emerging opportunities.

The mobility revolution is here. Whether you’re a student, a young professional, or mid-career engineer — the EV ecosystem needs you. Learn fast. Work smart. Drive forward.

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