India's Ethanol Surplus Crisis: Why Exports Aren't the Answer

India's ethanol industry is grappling with a significant surplus as domestic consumption has plateaued at 1,200 crore litres against a production capacity of 1,500 crore litres. Exports are not a viable solution due to India's high grain prices, which make grain-based ethanol globally uncompetitive. The industry expanded rapidly based on government policy signals, but there is now a major mismatch between projected demand and actual procurement. While ethanol has successfully transformed maize into an industrial crop, the sector faces uncertainty without clearer future blending targets and higher domestic absorption.

Key Points: Ethanol Surplus in India: Demand Stalls, Exports Unviable

  • Domestic ethanol demand has stalled
  • Exports are uncompetitive due to high grain costs
  • Industry capacity far exceeds current allocations
  • Policy projections have not matched reality
  • Maize transformed into an industrial crop
3 min read

Ethanol industry faces surplus as demand stalls, exports uncompetitive: GEMA President

India's ethanol industry faces a major surplus as domestic demand plateaus. High grain prices make exports uncompetitive, leaving producers in a bind despite past policy pushes for expansion.

"How can we export when grain prices in India are among the highest in the world? - CK Jain, GEMA President"

New Delhi, December 26

Exports are unlikely to provide a solution for surplus ethanol in India, according to CK Jain, President of the Grain Ethanol Manufacturers Association, who said domestic consumption has stagnated despite a sharp rise in production capacity.

Jain said ethanol consumption has effectively plateaued at around 1,200 crore litres, even though the industry is capable of supplying significantly more.

"Today we are capable of supplying 1,500 crore litres, but consumption has stopped," he said.

Though the industry is grappling with excess production, Jain ruled out exports as a solution for absorbing surplus ethanol.

"How can we export when grain prices in India are among the highest in the world?" he asked. "We are just converters. Seventy to seventy-two per cent of the ethanol price goes to farmers."

He clarified that while exports of second-generation (2G) ethanol are permitted, production remains negligible.

"They have given permission to export 2G ethanol, but it is not produced," he said, adding that grain-based (1G) ethanol cannot be price-competitive globally.

Jain recalled that the industry expanded rapidly after strong policy signals from the government during 2020-22.

"The government kept saying ethanol, ethanol, ethanol. They said we will not stop at 20 per cent; we will go beyond that," he said.

On the back of those assurances, producers invested heavily and significantly expanded capacity across the country.

Jain said there is a mismatch between policy projections and actual procurement of ethanol.

"If you read the NITI Aayog biofuel policy, they said consumption would be at least 1,500 crore litres by 2025," he said. "Against that, capacity offered was about 1,770 crore litres, but the allocation was only around 1,050 crore litres."

On food security concerns, Jain said fears around diversion of grains to ethanol are outdated.

He said diversion of grains for ethanol is limited.

"It is not more than 15-20 per cent of the total grain basket," Jain said, stressing that staples such as wheat and rice procured by FCI remain protected.

Ethanol feedstock, he said, includes maize and damaged food grains.

"Maize is hardly a human food. One or two per cent goes for human consumption," he said.

Jain emphasised that ethanol has transformed maize into an industrial crop for the first time. "Earlier, maize was only a feed crop. Now it has become an industrial crop," he said, adding that this has direct implications for farmer incomes.

He reiterated that grain-based ethanol played a critical role in achieving E20 blending but cautioned that without clarity on future blending targets and higher domestic absorption, the industry faces challenges ahead.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While the surplus is a problem, let's not forget the positives. Ethanol blending has reduced our oil import bill and provided farmers with an additional income source. The focus should be on boosting domestic demand, maybe by accelerating the rollout of E20 pumps across the country.
A
Aman W
Jain Sir makes a valid point about maize. In our village, farmers are now getting a better price for maize because of ethanol plants. It's become a cash crop. The worry is if this demand stalls, prices will crash. Government must ensure offtake.
S
Sarah B
Interesting read from an Indian context. The challenge of high input costs (grains) making exports uncompetitive is a structural issue. Perhaps more R&D into 2G ethanol from agricultural waste is the way forward, as it doesn't compete with food supply.
K
Karthik V
"Consumption has stopped" at 1200 crore litres? Why? Are OMCs not procuring as per plan? Or is the vehicle fleet not ready for higher blends? This lack of demand clarity is hurting everyone from investors to farmers. We need transparency.
N
Nisha Z
With all due respect to the industry, the food security argument is never "outdated". Using even 15-20% of the grain basket for fuel needs careful monitoring, especially with unpredictable monsoons. Priority must be human consumption and buffer stocks.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50