Government To Double Ethanol Distillation Capacities To Meet Blending Target By 2025

Government To Double Ethanol Distillation Capacities To Meet

Government aims to achieve 20 per cent ethanol blending with petrol by 2025

The Government aims to double ethanol distillation capacities to achieve the 20 per cent blending target by 2025. To enable this, sugar mills and distilleries have been asked to enhance their capacities.

The NDA Government has set up the target of achieving 20 per cent ethanol blended petrol by 2025, a target which it has advanced by five years.

Earlier this month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had released a report of an expert committee on a road map for ethanol blending in India from 2020 till 2025 on the World Environment Day.

India plans to reduce carbon emissions by 35 per cent by 2030 from its 2005 levels.

Secretary in the Ministry of Food and Public Distribution Sudhanshu Pandey told media persons on Tuesday that in order to facilitate capacity expansion of sugar mills and distilleries, bank loans are being provided for which interest subvention up to six per cent is being borne by the Government.

He said that the production of fuel grade ethanol and its supply to oil marketing companies has gone up by five times from 2013-14 to 2018-19.

“In the ethanol supply year (ESY) 2018-19, we touched a historically high figure of about 189 crore litres thereby achieving 5 per cent blending. It is expected that in current ethanol supply year 2020-21, more than 300 crore litres ethanol is likely to be supplied to oil marketing companies to achieve 8 to 8.5 per cent blending levels. It is also likely that we would be achieving 10 per cent blending target by 2022,” Mr Pandey said.

He told media persons that ethanol blended petrol will bring positive impact on country’s economy.

The Secretary said that it would promote ethanol as a fuel which is indigenous, non-polluting and virtually inexhaustible and would improve the environment and the eco-system as use of E20 fuel reduces carbon monoxide emission by 30 per cent to 50 per cent and hydrocarbon by 20 per cent.

He further informed that due to the upcoming investment of about Rs 41,000 crore in capacity addition of new distilleries, various new employment opportunities will be created in rural areas, which will strengthen the agricultural economy.

Also ethanol blended petrol would save foreign exchange of more than Rs 30,000 crore on account of crude oil import bill and also reduce dependence on imported fossil fuel, Mr Pandey informed.

Shri Pandey said in the next sugar season 2021-22, about 35 metric tonnes of sugar is estimated to be diverted and by 2025 about 60 metric tonnes of sugar is targeted to be diverted to ethanol, which would solve the problem of excess sugarcane as well as sugar and would also help sugar mills in clearing cane price dues of farmers.

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