• India’s ethanol blending push faces US trade pressure

    India’s ethanol blending programme—once held up as a model of clean energy transition—is now facing a complex web of domestic bottlenecks and international pressure. After achieving the 20% blending target ahead of the March 2025 deadline, policymakers were expected to raise the bar to 30% by 2030. But those ambitions are now under threat, not just from production constraints, but from Washington’s insistence that India open its market to US ethanol imports as part of an ongoing bilateral trade agreement.

    The Indian government finds itself caught in a policy dilemma. Yield to American demands, and the goal of self-reliance in sustainable fuels is jeopardised. Resist, and it risks derailing the broader trade deal, including the long-anticipated bilateral trade agreement (BTA).

    Ethanol as a strategic lever

    Ethanol blending has become a key pillar of India’s energy security strategy. By mixing ethanol—produced from sugarcane, maize, and other agricultural feedstocks—with petrol, India has managed to reduce crude oil imports and cut its fuel bill. Over the past decade, this shift has saved the country over Rs 1.2 trillion in foreign exchange and substituted nearly 19.3 million metric tonnes of oil.

    But ethanol is not just about energy economics. It also plays into rural prosperity, generating demand for agricultural produce, creating jobs in the hinterland, and aligning with India’s Paris Agreement climate goals. Like Brazil, which successfully scaled ethanol blending to 30% and beyond, India is eyeing higher ratios like E27 and even E100.

    American shadow on ethanol ambitions

    The US push to export cheaper, corn-based ethanol to India has alarmed domestic producers. Indian farmers—particularly in Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, and Karnataka—have invested heavily in cultivating sugarcane and maize to supply distilleries. Opening the market to imports risks undercutting local prices, undermining both farmer incomes and ethanol viability.

    Senior government officials have questioned the logic of compromising fuel sovereignty to appease an external partner. The concern is not only economic but strategic: energy self-sufficiency is critical for national resilience.

    Capacity constraints and economic viability

    Even without US imports, India’s ethanol supply chain is under stress. The current production capacity of 17 billion litres is expected to be maxed out by 2026 due to rising industrial and potable alcohol demand. To sustain E20 blending and aim for E30 by 2030–31, the Indian Sugar Manufacturers Association (ISMA) estimates that an additional 4.75 billion litres will be needed—along with Rs 220 billion in fresh investments.

    But investor appetite is waning. Shrinking margins—from 12–13% a few years ago to just 1–2% today—are discouraging expansion. Rising feedstock prices and stagnant ethanol procurement rates since 2022–23 have squeezed profitability. Triveni Engineering & Industries, a major player in sugar and ethanol, recently scrapped its proposed distillery in Nangal due to poor returns. Others are equally cautious.

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