India moves more than 70 percent of its domestic freight by road, making trucking one of the most important engines of the country’s logistics economy. Over the past decade, that engine has been strengthened through highways, freight corridors, warehousing capacity and larger commercial fleets. AIS 140 now adds a critical digital layer to this physical buildout. By bringing vehicle location tracking, emergency alerts and backend monitoring into the formal transport framework, the mandate has moved commercial mobility from fragmented adoption to a more connected operating environment. That is a meaningful policy achievement that creates the base layer for visibility across India’s commercial transport network. However, visibility is only the beginning.
A device fitted inside a truck can establish compliance. It does not automatically improve mileage, prevent breakdowns, reduce idle time or raise asset productivity. The next phase of connected mobility must therefore move from tracking vehicles to improving how they perform.
Fuel is the Clearest Test of Value
This distinction matters because commercial vehicle operations in India are intensely margin sensitive. A truck is not just a transport asset. It is a daily profit and loss unit. Every avoidable stoppage, inefficient route, delayed repair, idling pattern or fuel
anomaly directly affects operating economics. A higher fuel bill is rarely just a fuel issue. It can point to poor driving behaviour, excessive idling, route inefficiency, overloading, weak vehicle health, pilferage or billing gaps. These losses often appear small when viewed vehicle by vehicle. Across a fleet, route network or operating corridor, they can become a material drag on profitability.
This is where connected vehicle intelligence becomes commercially relevant. Location tracking can show where a truck is. Diagnostics, onboard data and fuel analytics can explain why efficiency is falling. That shift from visibility to diagnosis is the critical change. For fleet owners, the value of connectivity is not in watching vehicles move across a dashboard. It lies in identifying avoidable losses early enough to act.
Converting Leakage into Savings
Once these leakages are visible, the next test is whether fleets can act on them consistently. This is where connected mobility moves from compliance infrastructure to performance infrastructure. The value is not in generating more vehicle data, but in using that data to reduce recurring losses across trips, routes and fleets. This distinction is important because transport economics are shaped by repetition. A few litres of avoidable fuel use, a recurring idle pattern or a delayed maintenance decision may not materially affect one trip. Repeated across hundreds of trips, they begin to affect margins, working capital and asset utilisation. The commercial case for connected intelligence is therefore not built on one dramatic intervention. It is built on the steady removal of preventable inefficiencies.
The potential savings underline the point. With vehicle tracking, diagnostic trouble codes and onboard diagnostics data, annual savings can reach about ₹1.53 lakh per vehicle. With CAN data added, the potential can rise to around ₹3.93 lakh, according to Intangles data. Even at a conservative 25 percent probability, the estimated annual benefit ranges between ₹40,000 and ₹1 lakh per vehicle. For small fleet operators, this can protect working capital. For larger fleets, it can strengthen margin discipline across routes, vehicles and drivers. For the wider auto ecosystem, it shifts connected vehicles from a regulatory requirement to a performance asset. The truck is no longer only producing a compliance record, but generating intelligence that can improve fuel productivity, asset availability and operating economics.
The Next Reform is Trust in Vehicle Data
India’s logistics future will not be shaped only by adding more roads, ports, warehouses or vehicles. It will also depend on how efficiently existing transport assets are used. AIS 140 has created the digital foundation for this shift by connecting commercial vehicles at scale. The next phase must ensure that this connectivity delivers measurable operating value through trusted data, reliable systems and actionable intelligence. For fleet owners, the opportunity is lower leakage and stronger productivity. For OEMs and technology providers, it is a sharper view of vehicle performance in real operating conditions. For policymakers, it is the chance to turn a compliance mandate into a national productivity platform. India has connected the truck. The next test is whether that connection can make every trip more predictable, every litre more productive and every vehicle more profitable to operate.