Analysis

Ola Electric Raises $100 Million In Long-Term Debt From Bank of Baroda For EV Mega-Factory It Is Setting Up In A 500-acre Site In Tamil Nadu

  • The Ola Futurefactory is coming up on a 500-acre site in Tamil Nadu, India. At full capacity of 10 million vehicles annually it will be the world’s largest two- wheeler factory.
  • Ola Electric, the electric vehicles (EV) arm of cab aggregator Ola, today (Jul 12) announced that it had raised $100 million (Rs 744.5 crore) in long-term debt from Bank of Baroda.

Swarajya StaffJul 12, 2021, 05:48 PM | Updated 05:48 PM IST
Ola FutureFactory Phase 1 Tamil Nadu

Ola FutureFactory Phase 1 Tamil Nadu


Ola Electric, the electric vehicles (EV) arm of cab aggregator Ola, today (Jul 12) announced that it had raised $100 million (Rs 744.5 crore) in long-term debt from Bank of Baroda.

10-year debt of US$100 million is towards the funding and financial closure of the Phase 1 of the Ola Futurefactory, Ola’s global manufacturing hub for its electric two-wheelers.

The Ola Futurefactory is coming up on a 500-acre site in Tamil Nadu, India. At full capacity of 10 million vehicles annually it will be the world’s largest two- wheeler factory.


"Today’s agreement for long term debt financing between Ola and Bank of Baroda signals the confidence of the institutional lenders in our plans to build the world’s largest two-wheeler factory in record time. We are committed to accelerating the transition to sustainable mobility and manufacture made in India EVs for the world and we are happy that Bank of Baroda has joined us in our journey,” said Bhavish Aggarwal, Chairman & Group CEO, Ola.

“The government has brought in several policies to incentivise make-in-India and to enable India to become a global EV leader. Ola is leading from the front and we are delighted to partner with them for their EV business. The Ola Futurefactory will put India on the global EV map and we are proud to be associated with them”, said Sanjiv Chadha, Managing Director & CEO, Bank of Baroda.

Earlier this month, Ola CEO Bhavish Aggarwal took to Twitter to share that the factory’s Phase-I was nearing completion and that the company's electric scooters would soon hit the market.


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