Hyundai Motor Group has expanded its electric vehicle research network in India by partnering with more universities under its Hyundai Centre of Excellence (Hyundai CoE) initiative.

The company says the move aims to accelerate:
- Battery technology research
- EV development
- India-specific electrification solutions
Hyundai Expands to Seven Universities
Hyundai has now added four new institutions to the program:
- IIT Kanpur
- IIT Hyderabad
- VNIT Nagpur
- Tezpur University
These institutes join the three original partners from 2025:
- IIT Madras
- IIT Delhi
- IIT Bombay
creating what Hyundai calls India’s premier academic-industrial EV research network.
Focus on Battery and EV Technology
Hyundai says the research projects will focus on several key EV areas, including:
- Battery cells
- Battery Management Systems (BMS)
- Energy density
- Safety
- Durability
- Diagnostic technologies
The company also revealed that the Hyundai CoE platform is already working on 39 joint research projects.
AI-Based Vehicle-to-Grid Research
One of the major projects currently under development involves AI-powered Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) systems, which could eventually allow EVs to:
- Supply power back to the grid
- Improve energy management
- Support smarter charging ecosystems
Hyundai Wants India-Specific EV Solutions
Hyundai says the entire initiative focuses heavily on building India-specific EV technologies instead of simply adapting global solutions for the local market.
The company believes closer collaboration between:
- Industry
- Universities
- Researchers
will help India accelerate its transition toward electric mobility.
Korea-India Knowledge Exchange Programs Planned
Hyundai also plans to introduce:
- Academic exchange programs
- Global EV conferences
- Technology forums
to improve collaboration between Indian and Korean researchers.
The company says these programs will help create:
- Faster knowledge sharing
- Better EV research and development
- Stronger industry-academia partnerships
Why This Matters
India’s EV market is growing rapidly, but battery research and advanced EV technology development still rely heavily on imports and foreign ecosystems. Hyundai expanding its research footprint in India could help strengthen local innovation and support long-term EV manufacturing growth in the country.
Final Take
Hyundai’s expanded university partnership shows the company is thinking beyond simply selling EVs in India. By investing in local battery research, academic collaboration, and India-focused technology development, Hyundai appears to be building a much deeper long-term strategy for the country’s electric future.