• Latest
  • Trending
The return of the king: Middle East fires ignite coal’s massive comeback

India’s Energy Balancing Act: Biofuels, Coal and a Grid Still Running on Fossil Fuel

MOU to end the Middle East war : Impact on Indian stock market and investor outlook

MOU to end the Middle East war : Impact on Indian stock market and investor outlook

Commodities under pressure as Fed hawkishness and U.S.–Iran deal reshape market sentiment

Commodities under pressure as Fed hawkishness and U.S.–Iran deal reshape market sentiment

Bharat Forge wins ₹425 crore order to modernize Indian Navy warships

Bharat Forge wins ₹425 crore order to modernize Indian Navy warships

HDFC Bank reports strong Q4 FY26 business growth; Deposits rise 14.4% YoY

RBI extends Keki Mistry’s tenure as HDFC Bank interim Chairman

Accenture and CrowdStrike partner to drive cybersecurity transformation

Accenture cuts growth outlook, signals softer IT spending

Wipro completes major data center migration for METRO

Wipro completes major data center migration for METRO

Hexaware to invest £25 million in UK expansion, create 1,200 jobs

Hexaware to invest £25 million in UK expansion, create 1,200 jobs

Tata Motors hikes commercial vehicle prices by up to 2.5% from July 1

Tata Motors hikes commercial vehicle prices by up to 2.5% from July 1

Nykaa reports strong Q2 growth in revenue and profit

Nykaa share price surges as the beauty product retailer eyes tripling revenue by FY30

IBM Study: Limited control and rising dependencies leave enterprises exposed in the age of AI

IBM Study: Limited control and rising dependencies leave enterprises exposed in the age of AI

Crude oil slides to three-month low as U.S.–Iran deal improves supply outlook

Crude oil slides to three-month low as U.S.–Iran deal improves supply outlook

CBDT clarifies tax rules for pensioners’ medical reimbursements

CBDT clarifies tax rules for pensioners’ medical reimbursements

  • Market
  • Commodity
  • Personal Finance
  • Data Story
  • News
  • Contact Us
Saturday, June 20, 2026
  • Login
Data Biz Times
No Result
View All Result
Data Biz Times
No Result
View All Result

India’s Energy Balancing Act: Biofuels, Coal and a Grid Still Running on Fossil Fuel

in Opinion
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0
The return of the king: Middle East fires ignite coal’s massive comeback
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Sadananda Mohapatra, Senior Business Journalist

India’s Biofuel Ambition Has a 10% Ceiling on Crude Imports. The Real Payoff Lies Elsewhere.

ndia’s launch of E85 fuel in June 2026 triggered a wave of public debate on social media, mostly centred on a narrow but legitimate concern: what happens to the millions of E20-compatible vehicles already on Indian roads? The short answer is nothing — E85 is exclusively for flex-fuel vehicles, which run on any ethanol-petrol blend from E20 to E100. But the louder and more important question went largely unasked: how much can India’s biofuel programme actually reduce its dependence on imported crude oil?

The arithmetic is sobering. Petrol accounts for roughly 8-9% of India’s total crude consumption. Even at full E20 blending across the entire petrol pool — which India has now largely achieved — ethanol displaces barely 1.7-2% of crude imports. Scale that up to E85 with complete flex-fuel vehicle penetration across the country, a scenario that took Brazil decades to build, and the displacement reaches 6-7% of crude imports. Add Road Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari’s proposed 15% isobutanol blending in diesel — still in trial stage — and the combined best-case ceiling lands at roughly 10-12% of India’s crude import volume.

The global comparison India frequently invokes deserves scrutiny. The United States accounts for 55% of global ethanol consumption, with Brazil a distant second. India, ranked third, holds just a 2.3% share of global ethanol consumption. Together, the US and Brazil produce 80% of the world’s ethanol — the US primarily from corn, Brazil from sugarcane — built over decades of agricultural policy, flex-fuel vehicle mandates and retail infrastructure investment. India’s sugarcane supply is finite, competes directly with food security, and grain-based ethanol carries significant water stress implications in a country already under groundwater pressure. Closing the gap with Brazil or the US is a generational project, not a policy cycle.

So if the crude import arithmetic is limited, where does the real payoff of India’s biofuel programme lie? The benefits are real but differently located. Every barrel of petrol displaced saves foreign exchange — at full scenario, potentially $10-12 billion annually. Sugarcane and grain farmers receive a direct and stable demand signal, strengthening rural income and the broader biofuel ecosystem. Ethanol combustion produces fewer particulates than pure petrol, contributing measurably to urban air quality. And at the margin, any reduction in import dependence adds a layer of energy security in a world where, as the current West Asia crisis has demonstrated, supply routes can be disrupted overnight.

The larger levers for cutting crude dependence lie elsewhere — electric vehicle penetration addressing petrol and diesel together, green hydrogen replacing refinery and fertiliser feedstock, compressed biogas substituting diesel in heavy transport. Ethanol and isobutanol are necessary parts of that toolkit. But they are the supporting cast, not the lead.

India is right to push its biofuel programme hard. It just deserves honest framing.


Joules Capsule (Quick reads from the world of energy this week)

India’s Coal Output Slips Nearly 10% Year-on-Year in May

India’s coal production rebounded month-on-month in May 2026 after a weak April, but preliminary Ministry of Coal data shows output still running nearly 10% below May 2025 levels. Coal India Limited, which accounts for the bulk of domestic output, led the recovery but remains below year-ago volumes. The year-on-year decline raises questions about whether the softening reflects seasonal maintenance patterns, slower offtake from power plants drawing down stocks, or early signs of a structural production plateau. A second consecutive monthly decline would warrant closer watching.

India’s Steel Push to Keep Coking Coal Demand Climbing

BHP’s chief financial officer Vandita Pant recently told the Australian Financial Review she is “very bullish” on metallurgical coal, projecting India’s steel output will grow from 164 million tonnes today to 400-500 million tonnes by 2050. India’s coking coal imports already rose 32% year-on-year in 2025 to 73.53 million tonnes, with Australia remaining the top supplier. India imports around 90% of its metallurgical coal needs despite holding an estimated 37.37 billion tonnes of domestic reserves, primarily in Jharkhand. The government notified coking coal as a critical mineral in January 2026 to accelerate domestic mining and reduce import dependence.

At Peak Demand, Coal Still Carries Nearly Three-Quarters of India’s Grid

India’s grid peaked at 246,303 MW on June 15, with total consumption at 5,415 MU. Solar contributed 10.5% of generation and wind 9.6%, with hydro adding 7.2% — bringing total clean generation to roughly 28%. Coal and thermal sources covered the remaining 72%, or approximately 177,000 MW at peak. The pattern underlines a structural gap India’s energy transition has yet to bridge: renewable capacity is growing, but without storage at scale, coal remains the indispensable backstop at every demand peak.

About the Author:

Sadananda Mohapatra is a veteran business journalist with decades of experience covering India’s energy, industry, and economic landscape. With stints at reputed financial news publications like The Business Standard & NewsWire18, he reported extensively on India’s power sector, minerals policy, coal and energy regulation, and industrial developments — building a deep, ground-level understanding of the global energy economy. His work spans corporate affairs, infrastructure, and policy analysis, with a particular focus on eastern India’s resource-rich industrial corridor. He currently writes on the global energy landscape through his newsletter, The Joule’s Stack.

Related Posts

Washington’s Hand on India’s Gas Tap

Washington’s Hand on India’s Gas Tap

0

By Sadananda Mohapatra, Senior Business Journalist India’s Cooking Gas Balancing Act: Supply Managed, But the Clock Is Ticking In three...

India Kept the Oil Flowing. Here Is What It Cost

India Kept the Oil Flowing. Here Is What It Cost

0

By Sadananda Mohapatra, Senior Business Journalist Lead Story: Same Volumes, Twice the Price: How India Kept Its Crude Supply Intact...

The return of the king: Middle East fires ignite coal’s massive comeback

The Heatwave Stress-Test: What the New 271 GW Record Tells Us About India’s Grid

0

By Sadananda Mohapatra, Senior Business Journalist Lead Story: India’s Grid Hits 271 GW — A Record That Reveals a Structural...

SIP – VILLAIN OR HERO?

SIP – VILLAIN OR HERO?

0

By Sunil Subramaniam, Financial Sector Veteran & Ex-MD of Sundaram Mutual Fund, Chennai SIP TO BLAME FOR FIIs SELLING, RUPEE...

MOU to end the Middle East war : Impact on Indian stock market and investor outlook
Market

MOU to end the Middle East war : Impact on Indian stock market and investor outlook

0

By Sunil Subramaniam, Financial Sector Veteran & Ex-MD of Sundaram Mutual Fund, Chennai The formal signing of the Memorandum of...

Read moreDetails
The return of the king: Middle East fires ignite coal’s massive comeback
Opinion

India’s Energy Balancing Act: Biofuels, Coal and a Grid Still Running on Fossil Fuel

0

By Sadananda Mohapatra, Senior Business Journalist India's Biofuel Ambition Has a 10% Ceiling on Crude Imports. The Real Payoff Lies...

Read moreDetails
Commodities under pressure as Fed hawkishness and U.S.–Iran deal reshape market sentiment
Commodity

Commodities under pressure as Fed hawkishness and U.S.–Iran deal reshape market sentiment

0

DBT Bureau Pune, 19 June 2026 Commodity markets witnessed heightened volatility as the U.S. Federal Reserve maintained a hawkish stance...

Read moreDetails
Bharat Forge wins ₹425 crore order to modernize Indian Navy warships
Market

Bharat Forge wins ₹425 crore order to modernize Indian Navy warships

0

DBT Bureau Pune, 19 May 2026 Bharat Forge Limited (BFL) has signed a ₹425 crore contract with the Ministry of...

Read moreDetails
DBT Bureau

Data Biz Times © 2024. All Rights Reserved.

Navigate Site

  • Media Release
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Market
  • News
  • Data Story
  • Business
  • Media Release
  • Tech
  • Contact Us

Data Biz Times © 2024. All Rights Reserved.