While Audi kicked off its electrification journey in India with the launch of three all-electric SUVs under the e-Tron brand last week, Mercedes-Benz has been selling its all-electric SUV EQC since October last year.
Will be nearly identical to the global-spec model, powered by a 95kWh battery pack with a claimed range of over 400km
Trial production for the electric SUV is already underway
Both electric SUVs are set to go on sale in India in late 2019
Will be based on the PPE platform that it will share with the Porsche Taycan
Mitsubishi’s upcoming electric crossover concept could preview the fourth-gen Outlander
The British carmaker will start its Indian innings with a Harrier rival, followed by an electric SUV to rival the Hyundai Kona Electric
The concept will debut at the 89th Geneva International Motor Show in March
Will be made available on subscription basis as well, through partnership with service provider Myles
The India-bound electric SUV will have a 400km-plus range!
The all-electric SUV global model is based on the regular ZS SUV, likely to be the second MG model for India
Will be Mahindra’s first long-range EV in India
The SAV (SUV in BMW speak) will go into production by 2021
Audi's first-ever electric SUV, which is likely to be priced well over the Rs 1 crore mark in India, packs a range of over 400km
The SUVs in question could be the standard and electric versions of the Roewe RX5
As it turns out, the electric SUV slated for launch in 2020 is not as small as we had initially thought
The GLC-sized EQC SUV, which was teased recently, will become the first product from the range
He would take his colour, brushes and canvas outside to paint and talk with his love. He would stand close to the window and paint, keeping an eye on his muse.
They say the violin mimics the human sound. In his case, it was that of love, of longing. He didn’t know any other way of loving.
Younger people do not have much progressive beliefs; a 2017 survey found that one-third of young people opposed inter-caste marriage.
The pandemic has made it clear that virtual learning is here to stay. In the West, the big question is whether it will dilute the quality of the college experience and education. In India, which grapples with digital divide, the question remains whether this will reach most people at all.
Even after two years of the Covid-19 pandemic, many 'informed' individuals in India continue to deny the virus with unscientific claims and unfounded data. The latest? Omicron will end the pandemic.
Across Asia there are deeply entrenched obstacles to a mode of higher education that is liberal in multiple senses – disciplinary and epistemological but also social and political.
The two incidents in the recent past, one in Mon district of Nagaland and the other at Lakhimpur Kheri in Uttar Pradesh, undermined the core principles democracy and federalism.