Hero MotoCorp's first flex-fuel motorcycle launched; Hardeep Puri says such vehicles offer solution to reduce India's crude oil imports
New Delhi, June 3
Flex Fuel Vehicles offer India a practical solution to reduce crude oil imports, strengthen the rural economy through ethanol demand, and advance low-carbon mobility, Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri said during the Launch of Hero MotoCorp's First Flex-Fuel Motorcycle in the national capital today.
Union Minister for Road, Transport and Highways Nitin Gadkari was also present during the event.
Puri described the launch as a new chapter in India's energy history, with the introduction of new motorcycles compatible with ethanol blends from E20 to E85. He added that the launch of the Splendor+ and HF Deluxe Flex Fuel motorcycles marks India's entry into mass-market flex-fuel mobility with Aatmanirbhar vehicles.
India has one of the world's largest two-wheeler ecosystems with an active two-wheeler fleet of over 300 million vehicles. The flex-fuel technology has the potential to transform mobility at an unprecedented scale, a release said.
The shift to mass-market flex-fuel mobility can cut crude imports, support farmers, and make vehicle ownership cheaper for consumers.
Puri said the launch marks India's entry into large-scale flex-fuel mobility. Hero is the world's largest manufacturer of motorcycles and scooters for 25 consecutive years, with nearly 29% market share in India. It has an active two-wheeler fleet of over 30 crore vehicles.
The new bikes are compatible with ethanol blends from E20 to E85 and use upgraded fuel systems, revised ECU calibration and flex-fuel capable components.
Puri said India imports nearly 88.5% of its crude oil and "every geopolitical disruption impacts our economy and energy security."
He recalled that ethanol blending was just 1.4% in 2014, rose to 10% five months ahead of the November 2022 target, and hit 20% six years ahead of the 2030 goal. That progress has already saved 1.84 lakh crore in foreign exchange, substituted 302 lakh metric tonnes of crude, cut 909 lakh metric tonnes of CO2 emissions, and delivered Rs 1.58 lakh crore in income to farmers. "Our annadatas have become urjadatas," he said.
He gave basic arithmetic to show the impact of even 1% adoption. If 1% of annual petrol vehicle sales shift to E85 in ethanol supply year 2026-27, it will generate over 4 crore litres of ethanol demand, Rs 266 crore in payments to distilleries, Rs 195 crore in forex savings, 0.28 lakh metric tonnes less crude imports, 0.86 lakh metric tonnes of CO2 reduction, and Rs 160 crore directly to farmers. "And this, my friends, is just with 1% adoption. Imagine the transformational impact when flex-fuel technology scales across India's vast two-wheeler ecosystem," Puri said.
On consumer economics, Puri said E85 will be made available at designated pumps and will be "substantially cheaper than normal fuel." With appropriate pricing, studies show ownership cost parity with E20 can be achieved quickly. He added that the platform is "made almost entirely in India" with hardly 1-2% imports, and if it runs on "fuel which is totally indigenous," it beats imported crude on cost.
The minister said the government is "actively examining supportive policy frameworks to accelerate affordable adoption" including fuel price support and targeted fiscal incentives. He said India's future mobility will combine EVs, biofuels, hydrogen and renewables, but flex-fuel vehicles offer a "pragmatic and immediately deployable pathway" to cut imports, strengthen the rural economy, and advance low-carbon goals.
— ANI
Reader Comments
Good initiative, but I'm skeptical about the 'cheaper than normal fuel' claim. Ethanol production itself requires water and energy, and prices fluctuate with sugarcane yields. Also, what about engine wear with higher ethanol blends? My mechanic always warns against using too much ethanol in older bikes. 🤔
This is exactly what we need - Aatmanirbhar mobility! Our farmers already provide food, and now they become energy providers too. I'm glad the government is pushing multiple pathways - EVs, biofuels, hydrogen. Not putting all eggs in one basket is smart. Hope Hero makes these bikes affordable for the common man.
Impressive numbers from the minister - saving ₹1.84 lakh crore in forex already! But I wish they'd also focus on reducing our overall fuel consumption through better public transport and stricter fuel efficiency norms for cars. Flex-fuel is good, but reducing demand should be the priority. Just my two paise.
As an expat living in Bangalore, I see huge potential here. Brazil has been using flex-fuel successfully for decades. If India can replicate that model with its massive two-wheeler market, the impact on global oil markets and emissions could be significant. But infrastructure rollout and consumer education will be key challenges.
Practical solution indeed! EVs still have range anxiety and high upfront cost. Flex-fuel bikes can be a bridge technology. Just hope the government keeps its promise on pricing - if E85 is significantly cheaper, adoption will happen naturally. Otherwise, people will stick to regular petrol. 🇮🇳
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