Kejriwal Questions E20 Ethanol Policy on Forex Impact
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
AAP convenor Arvind Kejriwal on Thursday, 9 July 2026, publicly challenged the central government's justification for its E20 ethanol blending mandate, claiming the policy is causing greater foreign exchange outflow rather than saving it, while imposing costs and hardship on ordinary consumers.
Context
Kejriwal shared what he described as a must-read article on the economic impact of the E20 policy, writing: 'Govt was saying that ethanol saves forex. No. On the contrary, E20 decision is causing more forex outflow and no other benefit with huge costs and harassment to ordinary people.' The post directly disputes a central plank of the government's case for accelerating ethanol blending — that it reduces India's dependence on costly crude oil imports.
The E20 programme mandates blending up to 20 per cent ethanol with petrol at fuel pumps across the country. The government has positioned it as a tool for energy security, farmer income support, and reduction of the oil import bill.
Policy Backdrop
India's ethanol blending programme dates to 2003, when an initial 5 per cent blending target was introduced under the Ethanol Blended Petrol programme. The National Policy on Biofuels, 2018 raised the ambition to a 20 per cent blending target, originally set for 2030.
In 2021, the central government advanced that deadline to 2025 and began a phased rollout at fuel pumps, requiring upgrades to dispensing infrastructure and vehicle compatibility standards. Successive administrations have linked higher ethanol targets to sugarcane and grain feedstock procurement, framing the policy as a dual benefit for farmers and the exchequer.
The standard official argument has been that displacing imported crude with domestically produced ethanol reduces the forex burden on India's current account. Kejriwal's post challenges that arithmetic directly, alleging the net effect runs in the opposite direction.
Stakeholders and Impact
Petrol consumers and vehicle owners are at the centre of the debate. Higher ethanol blends can affect fuel efficiency in vehicles not optimised for E20, potentially raising effective per-kilometre costs for millions of two-wheeler and car owners. Oil marketing companies have had to invest in pump infrastructure upgrades to handle the higher blend.
On the supply side, ethanol production in India draws primarily from sugarcane and surplus foodgrains, meaning the economics of the programme are sensitive to agricultural output, sugar prices, and grain availability — variables that can themselves affect import requirements and domestic food costs.
Kejriwal's framing — 'huge costs and harassment to ordinary people' — points to consumer-level friction, though specific verified figures on the scale of such costs are not yet available from official sources.
What's Next
The political salience of this critique is likely to grow as the government's own data on E20 rollout outcomes becomes available and as parliamentary committees examine the programme's net economic impact. Any official accounting that disaggregates forex savings from feedstock import costs, infrastructure spending, and vehicle efficiency losses will be closely watched by both the opposition and independent economists.
With AAP positioning itself as a watchdog on economic policy, Kejriwal's intervention signals that the ethanol blending programme will face sustained scrutiny in the months ahead — particularly if consumer-facing costs remain visible at the pump.