India is considering increasing its target for ethanol blending in gasoline from the current level of 20pc, oil and gas minister Hardeep Singh Puri said.
"We have already set up a group under [government think-tank] Niti Aayog and the concerned people who are looking at it," Puri said, without indicating how long the process could take.
Ethanol blending in gasoline reached a record high of 17.4pc in the three months from November 2024 to January 2025, and 19.6pc in January, the latest oil ministry data show.
India initially set a target to achieve a 20pc ethanol blend in gasoline in the November 2025 to October 2026 period, under its ethanol blending programme designed to cut dependence on crude imports.
India is likely to achieve the 20pc target by March, Puri said.
The government estimates that 11bn litres/yr of ethanol would be needed to achieve the target. Domestic ethanol production has currently reached around 15bn l/yr, comprising 6.05bn l/yr from grain-based distilleries and 9.23bn l/yr from molasses-based distilleries. Ethanol interest subvention schemes have helped increase ethanol distillation capacity to 17bn l/yr.
India's crude oil consumption is likely to rise to 6.5mn-7mn b/d in the short to medium term from around 5.5mn b/d now, buoyed by economic growth, Puri said.
The IEA expects India to again be among the leading sources of oil demand growth this year, forecasting its demand to rise to 5.83mn b/d in 2025 from 5.6mn b/d in 2024.