From 1.5% to 20% blending: How India’s ethanol push is emerging as a buffer against crude volatility
As global crude markets reel under supply disruptions linked to the Middle East crisis, India’s aggressive ethanol blending programme is drawing international attention for helping cushion the country against oil shocks.
A report published in the Kuwait-based newspaper The Times Kuwait said India’s long-term ethanol strategy has strengthened its energy security at a time when the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has triggered volatility across global fuel markets.
The report noted that India, which began with a modest ethanol blending target of 5 per cent in 2003, has rapidly scaled up the programme and achieved nearly 20 per cent ethanol blending in petrol ahead of schedule. The country is now preparing for E85 petrol and E100 fuels for flex-fuel vehicles capable of running on multiple ethanol blends.
The article described India as one of the world’s most closely watched biofuel success stories, especially as many economies struggle to cope with rising crude prices and uncertain supply chains.
How India accelerated its ethanol blending programme
According to the report, India’s ethanol blending levels stood at just 1.53 per cent in 2014. However, sustained policy backing, expansion of distillery infrastructure, and long-term planning helped accelerate adoption over the last decade.
A major shift came in 2018 with the rollout of the National Policy on Biofuels, which widened the scope of ethanol production beyond sugarcane molasses.
The programme was expanded to include damaged food grains, surplus rice, maize, and agricultural residues. The report said this helped reduce excessive dependence on water-intensive sugarcane while also bringing grain-producing regions in northern and central India into the biofuel ecosystem.
Why ethanol is becoming central to India’s energy strategy
What started as an environmental initiative aimed at cutting carbon emissions has now evolved into a wider economic and strategic programme, the report observed.
It highlighted that reduced dependence on imported crude oil is helping India save billions of dollars in foreign exchange, particularly at a time when geopolitical instability in West Asia continues to disrupt global energy supply chains.
The report also underlined the rural economic benefits linked to the ethanol push. Rising demand for biofuel feedstock is supporting sugarcane growers, grain farmers, distilleries, and logistics operators, while also generating employment opportunities across multiple sectors.
The expansion of the ethanol economy, it added, is increasingly being seen not just as a clean fuel transition but also as a key pillar of India’s economic resilience strategy.
This article has been republished from The Statesman.
