Renault has placed India at the centre of its future growth strategy, with the French automaker stating that India and South America together will account for more than 60% of the industry’s volume growth in the markets where the Renault Group operates. The comment came as the company unveiled its ‘futuREady’ strategy for 2026–2030, outlining the next phase of expansion following the turnaround achieved over the past five years.
“We are launching an offensive in selected fast-growing markets like India and South America,” said François Provost. “Together these two regions will generate more than 60% of the industry volume growth in the markets where the Renault Group is present.”
The strategy aims to take Renault’s global sales to over two million vehicles annually by 2030, supported by a fresh wave of products. The company plans to introduce 36 new models globally by the end of the decade, including 14 launches aimed at international markets outside Europe.
Europe Remains the Anchor
While Renault’s home market will continue to be Europe, the company is clearly looking beyond it to sustain growth.
“Europe as our anchor, new markets as our engine,” Provost said, describing the balance Renault hopes to strike between mature and high-growth markets in the coming years.
The company estimates that the regions where it operates represent a 50-million-unit annual market, accounting for roughly 55% of global automotive demand.
Product Push to Support International Expansion
The futuREady plan is backed by an expanded product pipeline.
Renault will launch 36 new models globally by 2030, including 22 models in Europe and 14 in international markets. The number of launches outside Europe is almost double the number the company introduced during the previous product cycle.
For markets such as India, this signals a renewed product focus as Renault looks to rebuild its presence with a broader portfolio across key segments.
Technology Approach Varies by Region
Renault’s powertrain strategy will differ across regions. In Europe, the company will continue to push electric vehicles aggressively, targeting a 50:50 mix of battery-electric and full-hybrid vehicles by 2030 for the Renault brand.
In markets outside Europe, including India, the company expects hybrid technology to play a larger role initially, with electrified vehicles projected to account for around half of Renault brand sales by 2030, led largely by its E-Tech full-hybrid systems.
The new roadmap marks the start of what Renault sees as its next chapter.
“Over the last five years we proved we can win. Now we must prove we can last,” Provost said, reflecting on the company’s recent turnaround and the need to sustain momentum.
For Renault, that momentum will increasingly depend on large, fast-growing markets such as India, where demand is expanding and the competitive landscape continues to evolve.