Why in the News?
India achieved its E20 ethanol-blending target in 2025, five years ahead of the original 2030 deadline, compressing the E5-to-E20 journey into just six years. Brazil took five decades to move from E10 to E30 blending, sequencing its mandate behind vehicle readiness and consumer price incentives at every stage.
How does the pace of India’s ethanol-blending mandate compare with Brazil’s phased trajectory?
- Brazil’s blending law dates to 1931: Brazil mandated a 5% anhydrous ethanol blend in petrol in 1931. This law preceded the National Alcohol Program by over four decades.
- 1973 oil crisis triggered Proálcool: The 1973 global oil crisis prompted Brazil to launch the National Alcohol Program in 1975. The program aimed to cut petroleum dependence through ethanol promotion.
- Brazil took 50 years for E10 to E30: Brazil moved from E10 to E30 blending over five decades. The 2025 blend increase to 30% followed dedicated government studies.
- India compressed E5 to E20 into six years: India’s blending share rose from E5 to E20 in six years. The 10% blending milestone was reached only in 2022.
- India’s 20% target was front-loaded: The original 20% ethanol target was set for 2030. The government advanced this to a nationwide standard years ahead of schedule.
- E20 target met five years early: India reached its E20 target in 2025. Blending stood at 19.2% at that point, up from 12.1% in 2023.
What specific Brazilian policy and institutional milestones enabled its ethanol transition?
- 1931 blending law set the baseline: Brazil’s first ethanol law fixed a 5% anhydrous ethanol blend in petrol. This gave the fuel market an early, low-disruption entry point for ethanol.
- Proálcool (1975) built institutional demand: The National Alcohol Program created sustained government-backed demand for ethanol after the 1973 oil crisis. This program anchored ethanol’s role in Brazil’s energy strategy for decades.
- Fiat’s 147 (1979) proved single-fuel ethanol vehicles: Italian automaker Fiat launched the 147, the world’s first vehicle powered entirely by ethanol. Volkswagen, GM and Ford followed with their own ethanol models.
- Flex-fuel production scaled from 2003: Volkswagen introduced Brazil’s first flex-fuel vehicle on March 23, 2003. Toyota’s flex-fuel Corolla sales rose from 48,178 units in 2003 to 1.63 million units, nearly 90% of the Brazilian car fleet, within two decades.
- National Biofuels Policy (2017) consolidated the regulatory framework: Brazil passed this policy to formalise its biofuel targets. It followed over four decades of incremental legislative steps.
- ‘Fuel of the Future’ and Mover Program (2024) targeted low-carbon vehicle technology: These laws pushed low-carbon vehicle technology and further biofuel adoption. They set the stage for the 2025 E30 mandate.
Why has India’s flex-fuel vehicle ecosystem lagged behind its blending mandate?
- India has only a handful of flex-fuel models: The WagonR flex-fuel model, Toyota Hycross hybrid flex-fuel prototype, Tata Punch and Hyundai Creta flex-fuel versions form India’s flex-fuel car range. Hero and TVS have introduced flex-fuel two-wheelers.
- Most Indian vehicles remain unequipped for high ethanol blends: Indian roads are not geared up for handling higher ethanol blends in the fuel mix. Most cars and two-wheelers use fixed-ratio fuel systems rather than flex-fuel sensors.
- Flex-fuel vehicles depend on a fuel composition sensor: This sensor adjusts fuel injection and ignition timing based on the ethanol-petrol blend in the tank. It allows seamless switching between petrol, ethanol, or blends of the two.
- India’s E85 dispensing stations are ahead of its vehicle base: E85 fuel dispensing stations are being established nationwide. Only a few flex-fuel vehicle prototypes exist to use them.
- Flex-fuel certification remains an incomplete category in India: Flex-fuel vehicles require an entirely separate vehicle category and a distinct set of readiness certifications. India has completed only a fraction of this process compared with Brazil’s near-complete fleet conversion.
Why did consumer price incentives drive Brazil’s ethanol adoption while their absence undermines India’s blending push?
- Brazilian pumps offer motorists a fuel choice: Nearly every Brazilian petrol pump offers a choice between blended petrol, typically E27, and E100, pure hydrous ethanol. Consumers choose whichever fuel is cheaper on a given day.
- Price gap made ethanol the rational choice in Brazil: E100 is typically 25-35% cheaper than lower-blended petrol in Brazil. This price gap, not the blending mandate alone, drove flex-fuel vehicle adoption.
- Government price support cemented flex-fuel demand: Brazilian government price support made blended fuel cheaper than petrol. Nine out of every 10 new cars sold in Brazil by the late 1980s could run on ethanol alone.
- Ethanol carries technical performance advantages: Ethanol improves acceleration and reduces engine knocking. This is cited as a further consumer benefit in Brazil.
- India offered a blending mandate without a matching price incentive or choice: Indian motorists were not offered a fuel choice at the pump. They were told performance would not be affected, without addressing fuel efficiency.
- Mileage was excluded from India’s performance assurance: The government’s performance assurance to motorists did not include mileage. Vehicle owners have since reported a sharp dip in fuel efficiency.
What questions does India’s rushed ethanol rollout leave unanswered?
- Efficiency losses are set to increase with higher blending: Vehicle owners have noticed a fuel-efficiency dip since blending began. This efficiency loss is expected to worsen as blending increases further.
- Vehicle damage concerns are contested but not absent: Concerns over vehicle damage appear overstated on the whole. Plastic and rubber components in older vehicles still show degradation.
- India’s E20-to-E25 transition is positioned as a strategic necessity: The push to raise blending from E20 to E25, ahead of a full shift to flex-fuel vehicles and E85-E100 fuels, is described as integral to reducing fossil fuel import dependence.
- Import dependence frames the urgency: India imports nearly 88.5% of its crude oil requirement. This dependence exposes the country’s energy security to geopolitical disruptions.
- The mobility strategy remains a declared combination without a sequencing plan: An official has stated that India’s future mobility ecosystem will combine EVs, biofuels, hydrogen and renewables suited to Indian conditions. No phased sequencing comparable to Brazil’s decades-long approach has been specified.
- The rollout proceeded without adequate disclaimers or preparation: The blending push moved forward without adequately preparing consumers or vehicle systems. This gap, more than the blending percentage itself, is the substance of the unresolved question for India.
Conclusion
Brazil’s ethanol success rested on sequencing blending mandates behind vehicle readiness and consumer price incentives, sustained across five decades. India has reversed this sequence, reaching its blending target years ahead of schedule without a matching flex-fuel vehicle base or price-based consumer choice. The unresolved question is not the blending percentage itself but whether India’s vehicle certifications, fuel infrastructure and consumer disclosures can catch up to a mandate already in force.




