Indian government has fixed a price of up to 65.61 rupees for purchase of ethanol from sugar mills as the nation wants to boost blending with gasoline, oil minister Hardeep Singh Puri said.
India, the world’s third biggest oil importer and consumer, has expedited efforts to double ethanol blending with gasoline to 20% from the current over 10% across the country from 2025/26.
Puri said 20% ethanol blended fuel will be sold in parts of country from April next year.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has pledged to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2070, and is encouraging industries to switch to cleaner options to cut carbon footprint.
The government fixes ethanol purchase prices for fuel retailers Indian Oil Corp, Bharat Petroleum Corp and Hindustan Petroleum Corp every marketing year from December, reflecting a change in floor price of sugar.
India recently raised the floor price that sugar mills must pay for cane in the season beginning Oct. 1 to 305 rupees per 100 kg, from 290 rupees a year earlier.
Indian fuel retailers have floated tenders seeking to buy 5.4 billion litres of gasoline for blending in 11 months from December compared to 4.40 billion litres sought for this year, to meet blending needs as the nation’s gasoline consumption is rising.
The new rates for ethanol derived from “C” heavy molasses will rise to 49.41 rupees per litre from 46.66 earlier. Rates for “B” heavy molasses will increase to 60.73 rupees from 59.08, and those derived from sugarcane juice/sugar/sugar syrup to 65.61 rupees from 63.45, the government said in a statement.
Tags: Blend, Carbon Footprint, Ethanol, Sugar
Recent Posts
Vedanta Aluminium signs pact with GAIL for supply of natural gas
HMM introduces South Korea’s first LNG-powered vessels
NGEL inks pact with NREDCAP in Andhra for RE projects
Global warming won’t end if net zero is redefined
The Liberian Registry and Korean Register (KR) grant AiP to Samsung
To satisfy decarbonization targets, Big Oil invests billions in the manufacture of biofuel
ISO issues standards for methanol as a marine fuel
Amazon, partners to test electric trucks on a freight corridor in India