On World EV Day, Tata Power teamed up with Tata Passenger Electric Mobility Ltd., marking the occasion with the quiet hum of new electric engines. They opened the TATA.ev MegaCharger Mumbai hub—the city’s first—just steps from Terminal 2 at Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport, beside The Leela Mumbai Hotel. India’s largest hub packs eight lightning-fast DC chargers—each delivering up to 120 kW—and 16 bays, so 16 electric cars can plug in at the same time.
Running on 100% renewable power and open around the clock, it welcomes everything from private cars and yellow cabs to ride-hailing fleets, delivery vans, and the steady stream of business travelers and tourists moving along the Andheri–BKC–South Mumbai corridor.
Speaking at the inauguration, Dr. Praveer Sinha, CEO and MD of Tata Power, hailed the hub as a benchmark for future-ready EV infrastructure, highlighting the company’s commitment to driving clean mobility nationwide. Shailesh Chandra, who heads Tata Passenger Electric Mobility and Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles, called it the first of many shared hubs and stressed Tata’s lead in driving India’s EV revolution, likening it to switching on the country’s first bright streetlamp.
This hub is now part of the expanding TATA.ev MegaCharger network, where TATA.ev owners enjoy perks like up to 25% discounts and priority charging access. Users can access it through the Tata Power EZ Charge App, already used by over 4 lakh people, and soon via the iRA.ev Connected Car app.
Tata Power has installed over 1,000 green charging stations in Mumbai, along with more than 5,500 public and captive EV points nationwide, 1,200 bus charging spots, and 1.4 lakh home chargers across 630 cities—from major metros to small towns. By 2030, the company plans to roll out 7.5 lakh home chargers and 10,000 public charging stations, serving every type of EV driver and pushing forward its “Sustainable is Attainable” vision—right down to the last plug on the street.