Latam Mobility México 2025: Mexico Advances EV, Sustainability
By Óscar Goytia | Journalist & Industry Analyst -
Wed, 10/15/2025 - 16:28
Latam Mobility México 2025 concluded its two-day summit at the World Trade Center Mexico City, positioning the country as a regional leader in sustainable and low-emission mobility. The event brought together more than 500 delegates, including government officials, automotive executives, fleet managers, technology providers, and financial institutions, to address the transition toward electrification, decarbonization, and innovative mobility solutions across Latin America
“For the Ministry of Economy, sustainable mobility represents much more than renewing the vehicle fleet; it is about reconfiguring the industrial and transport ecosystem, transforming the way we produce, move, and use energy,” says Rodolfo Osorio, Head of the Electromobility Sector, Mexico City’s Ministry of Economy, who opened the summit on behalf of Minister of Economy Marcelo Ebrard, emphasizing the need to align industry, regulations, and human capital.
He outlined three pillars driving Mexico’s transition: government leadership with interinstitutional coordination and private sector collaboration; Plan México, which promotes local value chains in strategic sectors such as electromobility and energy while strengthening human capital; and Development Poles, productive ecosystems where the state facilitates investment, capacity building, and technology transfer. Incentives include immediate 100% deductions for new fixed assets, additional 25% stimuli for training and innovation, and expedited administrative procedures.

The summit highlighted challenges in public transport, which serves nearly 80% of Mexicans daily, much of which relies on vehicles over 20 years old. The event featured initiatives such as the new Rutas del Bienestar (Well-Being Routes) program, which aims to develop at least 10 electromobility projects in collective public transport by 2030.
Infrastructure was a recurring theme. Panelists including Gonzalo Gómez (Huawei), César Alor (Autel), Patricia Baires (SynergEV), and Daniela Flores (Latnovva E-Mobility) stressed the need for a robust, collaborative charging network. Alor highlighted that of 52,000 charging points in Mexico, 48,000 are private, emphasizing opportunities for revenue-sharing and multi-use models. Baires advocated “collaborative charging,” where locations such as hotels and malls make stations available to external fleets, ensuring operational efficiency. “Collaborative charging will allow us to move faster in this transition,” said Baires.
Commercial and public fleets were identified as the fastest-growing segments. Experts noted that integrating telematics, aligning charger types to operational needs, and applying AI-enabled energy management are critical to scaling adoption while maintaining cost efficiency. The summit also addressed macroeconomic and climate considerations, including strategies to close the national climate investment gap, estimated at MX$150 billion to meet 2030 decarbonization targets.
Throughout Latam Mobility México 2025, innovation, regulatory alignment, and cross-sector collaboration emerged as central to advancing Mexico’s mobility ecosystem. “We no longer see Mexico as an emerging market but as a leader,” said César Alor.









