• India takes green freight leap as LNG trucks hit Punes logistics corridor

    A fleet of liquefied natural gas (LNG)-powered heavy-duty trucks was rolled out in Pune this week, marking a decisive shift toward low-emission transportation.

    The deployment, made possible through a strategic financial collaboration, represents one of the largest commercial transitions from diesel to alternative fuels in the country’s road freight ecosystem. With this, India’s green transport ambitions receive a real-world push, starting on the highways of Maharashtra. The rollout took place in Chakan, Pune a manufacturing and logistics hub underscoring the city’s growing importance in India’s clean mobility map.

    The new fleet forms part of a larger plan to put over 10,000 LNG and electric vehicles (EVs) on Indian roads in the coming years. The initiative aims to build an integrated network of 100 LNG refuelling stations and electric vehicle infrastructure nationwide. Such scale is expected to collectively reduce over one million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions annually roughly equivalent to taking more than 0.2 million petrol cars off the road each year.

    This transition comes at a critical time, as India’s transport sector is responsible for nearly 15% of its overall carbon emissions, according to estimates by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change. Despite efforts to electrify public transport and promote ethanol blending in fuels, the trucking industry has remained heavily reliant on diesel. By introducing high-performance LNG and EV trucks into the logistics mainstream, India is taking tangible steps towards bridging this clean-energy gap.

    The trucks, built for long-haul freight and industrial logistics, will serve sectors including e-commerce, metals, cement, oil and gas, and chemicals industries often criticised for their heavy carbon footprints. However, the vehicles’ rollout alone is not the story; it is the ecosystem being built around them. From investment backing by a leading non-banking financial company to the logistics operator’s plan for battery swapping and rapid charging stations, the scale and intent are noteworthy. By positioning these clean-energy trucks as viable and scalable, the project aims to overcome the cost and operational hurdles that have long plagued green logistics.

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