India is riding a hopeful wave of change in its transport sector. The recent comments by Minister Nitin Gadkari, given at the Panchajanya Infra Confluence 2025, show clear signs that our nation is steering its transport future in a greener, more sustainable direction.
With electric vehicles and renewable energy becoming part of mainstream policies, India aims not just for growth, but for growth with care for the environment. Using biofuels is particularly promising, turning farm waste like stubble into fuel can help reduce pollution in cities like Delhi, while also giving farmers new income opportunities. This dual benefit, cleaner air and stronger rural livelihoods, is exactly the kind of balanced development India needs.
The automobile industry is already huge, contributing massively to India’s economy and providing millions of jobs. But what gives even greater hope is that this industry can now become a leader in sustainability. If electric vehicles and biofuels gain more ground, they will help reduce carbon emissions, improve air quality and make transport less harmful to nature.
We are at a turning point. The choices made now will shape our future, how clean our air is, how healthy our cities are and how fairly economic benefits are shared. India is showing it can build modern transport systems that serve people and planet alike. If we continue on this path, the transport of tomorrow can be clean, green and inclusive.