Bajaj Is Working On Even More CNG-Powered Motorcycles, Aims to Disrupt EVs

3 months, 1 week ago - 10 September 2024, RideApart
Bajaj Is Working On Even More CNG-Powered Motorcycles, Aims to Disrupt EVs
Bajaj hopes to sell more than 40,000 CNG bikes per month before the end of the year.

India is the world’s biggest motorcycle market, and so it’s easy to understand how it often sets the stage for tech innovations for the rest of the world. It’s also an extremely price-sensitive market, so more often than not, these tech innovations focus on making people’s hard-earned money go as far as it can.

We recently saw this in Bajaj’s first CNG-powered motorcycle, the Freedom 125, a model praised for its affordability, accessibility, and reduced emissions.

And it’s clear that Bajaj has taken a step in the right direction with the Freedom 125, particularly when it comes to making mobility more accessible to more Indians. So it should come as no surprise that the Freedom is just the start of Bajaj’s CNG-focused initiatives.

The CEO of Bajaj Auto, Rajiv Bajaj, recently sat down with the folks at CNBC-TV18, and explained his company’s vision in the CNG space. He explained that the company will soon release yet another CNG model. Bajaj even went as far announcing the company’s goals of producing up to 100,000 CNG-powered two-wheelers. “We stand on the cusp of monthly sales and production of 100,000 clean energy vehicles by this festive season,” he explained.

The widespread use of CNG-powered two-wheelers makes a lot of sense in India, where the government is trying to strike a balance between affordability and reduced emissions. As of this writing, Bajaj has already sold around 2,000 units of the Freedom 125, a small-displacement workhorse that’s fed by a two-kilogram CNG cylinder paired with a two-liter fuel tank. Combined, the bike boasts a very impressive range of 330 kilometers (206 miles).

Bajaj is pretty dead set on capitalizing on the benefits of CNG, as it forecasts quite a bit of growth in the segment. Rajiv Bajaj explained that the company hopes to sell up to 40,000 CNG motorcycles per month by 2025.