Looking towards EVs

Published May 18, 2026
Note: Figures represent passenger EVs only. — Fatima S Attarwala
Note: Figures represent passenger EVs only. — Fatima S Attarwala

BYD’s showroom at Metropole has constant, if sparse, traffic in the background as Danish Khaliq, spokesperson and Vice President of Sales & Strategy for BYD Pakistan, talks about the EV giant’s plans in Pakistan. Despite the modest Rs5-per-litre cut in petrol prices over the weekend, fuel remains prohibitively expensive and more consumers are turning towards electric vehicles. Showroom walk-ins have quadrupled, he says, translating directly into higher sales conversions. The company’s $150m investment in its Gharo plant aims to achieve around 20pc localisation over the next two to three years.

Pakistan’s passenger EV imports have surged 338pc since the government’s National Electric Vehicle Policy in 2020, rising from just $45,000 in 2019 to $118.4 million in 2025. But the real driver of demand is the cost of commuting. Back-of-the-envelope calculations suggest that filling up a petrol vehicle for 400km can cost around Rs16,000 at current prices, compared to about Rs3,000-3,500 to fully charge BYD’s ATTO 3. With fewer moving parts and lower servicing requirements, maintenance costs can also fall by nearly two-thirds, Mr Khaliq claims.

It is likely that for the grandchildren of today’s younger generations, traditional cars will belong in museums. But given the mixed success of localisation in Pakistan’s conventional auto sector, the question remains whether the country is replacing one import-dependent industry with another.

Developing a strong EV market for cars is challenging because domestic demand is limited, as underlined by the Pakistan Business Council’s 2023 report ‘Electric Vehicles: Make in Pakistan Pers­pective’. It only becomes feasible if Pakistan taps into the global market, if not through complete cars, then through car parts.

Calling EVs a double-edged sword, the report highlights that the raw materials required have monopolistic and weak supply chains. Lithium, nickel, and rare earths are used in batteries and motors. Batteries have a limited lifespan and will eventually dominate import bills to sustain new production and maintain older fleets, the report states.

Without regulatory oversight and implementation, historically not the country’s strongest features, Pakistan may face a future where the current account deficit is due to lithium, instead of oil.

Published in Dawn, The Business and Finance Weekly, May 18th, 2026

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