Report: Electrifying school buses in Kerala

Published 11 June 2026

This study, conducted by CSTEP in collaboration with the Energy Management Centre Kerala, aims to support Kerala’s climate goals and strengthen preparedness for e-school bus adoption.

Setting the Context

School buses are a vital part of Kerala’s education system, providing safe and reliable transportation for students and staff. However, nearly all school buses in the state currently operate on diesel, contributing to local air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. Electric school buses (e-school buses) offer a cleaner and quieter alternative that can improve air quality, reduce emissions, and improve public health, including that of children. As Kerala advances its climate, energy security, and clean mobility ambitions, transitioning school transport fleets to electric vehicles presents an opportunity to achieve environmental, health, and energy benefits.

 

Why Was the Study Done?

To support Kerala’s climate goals and strengthen preparedness for e-school bus adoption, CSTEP, with support from the Energy Management Centre (EMC) Kerala, undertook a capacity-building programme for schools and associated stakeholders. The study engaged with nearly 100 schools across Thiruvananthapuram and Kochi and consulted vehicle manufacturers, charge point operators, electricity distribution companies, and government officials. It aimed to build awareness about electric school buses, understand adoption barriers, evaluate implementation pathways, and identify measures required to facilitate a successful transition.

 

What Did the Study Find?

The study found that schools were generally receptive to adopting e-school buses, particularly because of the health and environmental benefits. However, high upfront costs and limited awareness of suitable procurement and financing mechanisms emerged as major barriers.

An assessment of procurement models, including outright purchase, battery leasing, dry leasing, gross cost contracts, and retrofitting, showed that leasing-based approaches and gross cost contracts can improve affordability for schools with limited capital, while retrofitting offers a viable pathway for ageing diesel fleets. The study also identified financing opportunities through green loans, concessional lending, corporate social responsibility funding, and public development funds.

In addition, the study found that e-school buses have the potential to support Kerala’s energy transition through vehicle-to-grid (V2G) applications. Their predictable operating schedules and long idle periods make them suitable for providing grid services such as frequency regulation and energy storage.

 

Key Recommendations

  • Enable demand aggregation by consolidating e-school bus demand from multiple schools within the same locality. This can result in lower-price discovery, create economies of scale, and facilitate the development of shared charging infrastructure.
  • Improve access to affordable financing through mechanisms such as green loans from EMC Kerala, concessional lending from banks and financial institutions, corporate social responsibility funds, and MP/MLA development funds.
  • Strengthen policy support for e-school bus adoption through measures such as green school recognition frameworks, phase-wise adoption targets, low-emission zones around schools, access to low-interest green vehicle loans, fiscal incentives under national and state EV policies, and pilot deployments.

 

More about publication
Date 11 June 2026
Type Reports
Contributors
Publisher CSTEP
Related areas
Pages 64
Copyright CSTEP

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