ISMA suggests measures for the promotion of biofuel

Good — I have solid Tier 1 (PIB/NITI) facts. Combined with the article content, I can now write the full note.


UPSC Study Note: ISMA Suggests Measures for the Promotion of Biofuel


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Milestones (Chronological):

Year Milestone
2003 Ethanol Blended Petrol (EBP) Programme launched; 5% blending target set for select states.
2018 National Policy on Biofuels (NPB) 2018 notified; classified biofuels into Generations 1G, 2G, 3G; set 20% ethanol blending target by 2030. [S3]
2021 NITI Aayog published "Roadmap for Ethanol Blending in India 2020–25" — advanced 20% target to ESY 2025-26 (5 years earlier). [S3]
2022 NPB 2018 amended — formally advanced E20 target; expanded feedstock eligibility; added new categories. [S2]
2022 India achieved 10% blending, 5 months ahead of schedule. [S4]
2023 Bio-energy & Tech Expo 2024 — Petroleum Minister highlighted India's bioenergy progress. [S5]
2023–24 Blending reached 14.60% in ESY 2023-24. [S2]
2024–25 Blending reached 17.98% (as of Feb 2025). [S2]
Jan 2026 ISMA recommends GST rationalisation, SAF incentives, isobutanol, FFV parity with EVs. [S1]

Predecessor initiatives: - RUCO (Repurpose Used Cooking Oil) — for cooking-oil-based biofuels. - GOBARdhan (Galvanising Organic Bio-Agro Resources Dhan) — for compressed biogas (CBG). - Samarth Mission — skill development for biofuel workforce.


4. Core Static Facts

Definitions & Classifications (NPB 2018): - 1G Biofuels: From food-crop feedstocks (sugarcane juice, molasses, food grains, broken rice, damaged potatoes, corn). - 2G Biofuels: From lignocellulosic/agricultural residues (rice straw, cotton stalk, bagasse, saw dust, corn cobs). - 3G Biofuels: From algae, municipal solid waste. - SAF (Sustainable Aviation Fuel): Aviation-sector biofuel; India is developing a blending target for it. - FFV (Flex-Fuel Vehicle): Runs on 100% petrol, 100% bio-ethanol, or any blend; FFV-SHEV adds strong hybrid tech. - Isobutanol: Advanced biofuel with higher energy density than ethanol; can be blended at higher ratios.

Implementing Ministry / Body: - Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (MoPNG) — nodal ministry for EBP Programme and FFV push. - Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare — feedstock supply, sugarcane pricing. - Ministry of Road Transport & Highways — FFV manufacturing mandates. - NITI Aayog — policy architecture and roadmap. [S3] - ISMA (Indian Sugar and Bio-energy Manufacturers Association) — industry body; largest organised voice of sugar mills.

Key Numbers: | Parameter | Figure | |-----------|--------| | E20 Target (ESY) | 2025-26 | | Ethanol blending ESY 2024-25 | ~17.98% (as of Feb 2025) | | Ethanol blending ESY 2023-24 | 14.60% | | Ethanol blending ESY 2022-23 | 12.06% | | PLI Scheme coverage | Automobiles, auto components incl. flex-fuel engines | | ISMA demand on machinery duty | 5% (reduced from higher slabs) | | E-85 infrastructure rollout speed | ~10-15× faster than EV charging network |

Enabling Policy: - National Policy on Biofuels, 2018 (amended 2022) — primary policy instrument. [S3] - Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme — includes FFV and flex-fuel engine components.


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Geopolitical / Strategic

Scientific / Technological

Administrative

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. ISMA stands for Indian Sugar and Bio-energy Manufacturers Association — the apex body of sugar mills in India. [S1]
  2. India's ethanol blending in petrol reached 17.98% in ESY 2024-25 (as of February 2025) — highest ever. [S2]
  3. The 20% ethanol blending target was advanced to ESY 2025-26 from the original 2030 deadline, following the NITI Aayog Roadmap (2021). [S3]
  4. National Policy on Biofuels 2018 classifies biofuels into 1G, 2G, and 3G generations. [S3]
  5. 1G biofuels use food-crop feedstocks (sugarcane, molasses, broken rice); 2G use lignocellulosic waste (rice straw, bagasse, cotton stalk). [S3]
  6. Flex-Fuel Vehicles (FFVs) can run on 100% petrol, 100% bio-ethanol, or any blend — not limited to E20. [S2]
  7. E-85 flex fuel infrastructure rolls out approximately 10–15 times faster than EV charging networks. [S2]
  8. SAF = Sustainable Aviation Fuel — ISMA has urged the government to incentivise its domestic production. [S1]
  9. Isobutanol is an advanced biofuel with higher energy density than ethanol; ISMA specifically recommended its promotion alongside SAF and green hydrogen. [S1]
  10. The Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme includes flex-fuel engines and auto components to accelerate FFV manufacturing. [S2]
  11. GOBARdhan (Galvanising Organic Bio-Agro Resources Dhan) promotes Compressed Biogas (CBG) from organic waste — a related biofuel initiative. [S2]
  12. RUCO (Repurpose Used Cooking Oil) initiative targets used cooking oil as a biofuel feedstock. [S2]
  13. Nodal ministry for the Ethanol Blended Petrol Programme: Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas. [S2]
  14. ISMA demanded ethanol-related machinery be brought under 5% customs duty (from higher applicable rates). [S1]
  15. India achieved 10% ethanol blending 5 months ahead of schedule (announced 2022). [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Infrastructure: Energy, Environment; Conservation; Science & Technology — indigenisation of technology
GS-III Indian Economy — agriculture, industry linkages; food processing
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "India's sugar sector has the potential to emerge as a multi-vertical bio-energy hub. Critically examine ISMA's recommendations in this context and evaluate the policy architecture required to realise this potential." (GS-III) 2. "Flex-Fuel Vehicles (FFVs) offer a more practical and cost-effective path to clean mobility for India than Electric Vehicles (EVs). Discuss the merits, limitations, and required policy reforms." (GS-III) 3. "What is Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF)? Discuss India's potential and constraints in becoming a domestic producer of SAF, with reference to the biofuel policy framework." (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

  1. National Policy on Biofuels 2018 (and 2022 amendment) — foundational statutory/policy basis for all ISMA demands.
  2. GST Council & Rate Rationalisation — ISMA's top ask requires GST Council approval; federalism and Article 279A angle.
  3. National Green Hydrogen Mission — ISMA links green hydrogen from biomass to the sugar sector; dovetails with clean energy goals.
  4. Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) & ICAO CORSIA — aviation decarbonisation; international compliance obligation driving SAF demand.
  5. Ethanol Blended Petrol Programme & EBP roadmap post-E20 — what happens after 20% is achieved; higher blends, 2G scale-up.
  6. PLI Scheme for Auto Sector — FFV manufacturing is incentivised under PLI; connects to industrial policy.
  7. Sugarcane Pricing Policy (FRP vs SAP) — Centre-State tension in feedstock economics directly impacts ethanol supply.
  8. GOBARdhan Scheme & Compressed Biogas — parallel bioenergy pathway; often confused with ethanol blending in exams.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. ISMA ≠ government body: ISMA is an industry association (like FICCI/CII but specific to sugar), NOT a statutory body or ministry. Aspirants sometimes treat its recommendations as government policy.
  2. E20 target year confusion: The target was originally 2030, advanced to ESY 2025-26 by the 2021 NITI Aayog Roadmap and 2022 NPB amendment — NOT to 2030 and NOT to 2023.
  3. Ministry confusion: The EBP Programme falls under Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas, NOT Ministry of Agriculture or MoEFCC (though agriculture is involved in feedstock).
  4. FFV ≠ hybrid only: FFVs run on ethanol/petrol blends; FFV-SHEV adds a strong hybrid component. These are distinct categories — do not conflate FFVs with EVs or standard hybrids.
  5. SAF is NOT the same as CBG: SAF (Sustainable Aviation Fuel) targets aviation; Compressed Biogas (CBG) under GOBARdhan targets transport/cooking — they use different feedstocks and different sectors. Mixing them up in MCQs is a common error.

11. Sources