Policy missteps


UPSC Study Note — Policy Missteps: India's Energy Security & Oil Import Crisis (2026)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2014 GoI begins ramping up Ethanol Blending Programme (EBP); sets initial targets
2018 National Policy on Biofuels notified; indicative target of 20% ethanol blending in petrol by 2030 [S5]
2021-22 Target of 20% ethanol blending advanced to 2025-26 from 2030, given strong early performance [S5]
Nov 2022 India achieves 10% ethanol blending, 5 months ahead of schedule [S6]
Aug 2024 Cabinet approves modified PM JI-VAN Yojana (advanced biofuels), extended to 2028-29 [S6]
2024-25 India expands crude import sources from 27 to 40+ countries to diversify away from Hormuz dependency [S3]
Early 2026 India reduces Russian oil purchases under US tariff/diplomatic pressure; West Asia crisis reverses US position [S1]
Mar 2026 Petroleum Minister makes Parliamentary statement on West Asia supply disruptions [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

India's Oil Import Profile: - Import dependence: ~87–90% of crude needs met by imports [S1][S7] - Economy growth rate: 6–8% per annum, driving rising energy demand [S1] - Crude import sources expanded to 40+ countries by 2025 [S3] - ~70% of crude imports now routed outside the Strait of Hormuz (up from ~55% earlier) [S3] - 74 days total reserve capacity; ~60 days actual stock cover (including Strategic Petroleum Reserves in caverns) [S3]

Ethanol & Biofuel Policy: - National Policy on Biofuels, 2018 — nodal ministry: Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (coordination); MoAFW for feedstock - Revised target: 20% ethanol blending by 2025-26 [S5] - Cumulative savings since 2014: Foreign exchange savings ₹1.59 lakh crore; CO₂ reduction 813 lakh MT; crude substitution 270 lakh MT [S6] - PM JI-VAN Yojana (advanced biofuels from lignocellulosic feedstock): extended to 2028-29 [S6] - NITI Aayog published the Roadmap for Ethanol Blending in India 2020–25 (June 2021) [S8]

The Hormuz Factor: - Strait of Hormuz: ~20% of global oil trade passes through this chokepoint - Russia: produces >9 million barrels/day; removal from global supply would push prices to $130–200/barrel [S3]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative / Governance

Legal / Constitutional

Environmental

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India imports approximately 87–90% of its crude oil requirements — one of the highest import-dependence ratios among major economies. [S1]
  2. The Strait of Hormuz is the critical maritime chokepoint through which ~20% of global oil flows; India's direct Hormuz exposure has been reduced to ~30% of crude imports (from ~45%). [S3]
  3. National Policy on Biofuels, 2018 set an indicative target of 20% ethanol blending in petrol by 2030, later advanced to 2025-26. [S5]
  4. India achieved 10% ethanol blending five months ahead of schedule. [S6]
  5. The Ethanol Blending Programme has yielded ₹1.59 lakh crore in cumulative forex savings since 2014. [S6]
  6. CO₂ emissions reduced via ethanol blending since 2014: 813 lakh metric tonnes. [S6]
  7. Crude oil substitution via blending since 2014: 270 lakh metric tonnes. [S6]
  8. India expanded crude import sources from 27 to 40+ countries as a diversification measure. [S3]
  9. PM JI-VAN Yojana (advanced biofuels from lignocellulosic/waste feedstock) was extended to 2028-29 by Cabinet in August 2024. [S6]
  10. India's total petroleum reserve capacity is 74 days; actual stock cover ~60 days (including Strategic Petroleum Reserves in caverns). [S3]
  11. Russia produces >9 million barrels/day of crude; its removal from global markets was estimated to push prices to $130–200/barrel. [S3]
  12. NITI Aayog published the Roadmap for Ethanol Blending in India 2020–25 in June 2021. [S8]
  13. India previously yielded to US pressure on Iranian oil (2019) and Venezuelan oil imports — precedents repeated with Russian oil in 2026. [S1]
  14. Implementing ministry for the National Policy on Biofuels: Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (nodal). [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II India's foreign policy; bilateral relations (India-US, India-Russia); strategic autonomy
GS-III Indian economy — energy security; infrastructure; government policy on oil & gas; biofuels
GS-III Internal security / economic security — supply-chain disruptions
GS-IV Ethics in governance — policy coherence, transparency, communication

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "India's energy security policy has been reactive rather than strategic. Critically examine with reference to India's handling of oil imports from Russia, Iran, and the West Asian crisis." (GS-III, 250 words)
  2. "The Strait of Hormuz crisis of 2026 exposed both the strengths and structural weaknesses of India's approach to energy diplomacy. Analyse." (GS-II + GS-III, 250 words)
  3. "Effective policy communication is as important as sound policy itself. Comment in the context of India's response to the 2026 fuel availability concerns." (GS-IV / GS-II, 150 words)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR) India's buffer stock mechanism — directly relevant to measuring how long the country can withstand supply disruption
National Policy on Biofuels 2018 & amendments Core policy instrument for reducing import dependence; frequently tested in Prelims
India-Russia Relations Energy trade is a pillar; Russian oil discount narrative is central to understanding 2022-26 Indian foreign policy
India-US Strategic Partnership / CAATSA US pressure on India to cut Russian oil purchases sits within the broader CAATSA/sanctions context
Strait of Hormuz & India's Maritime Security Critical geopolitical chokepoint; links to India's naval strategy and IOR doctrine
India's NDCs & Energy Transition Tension between fossil-fuel dependence and Paris Agreement commitments
PM JI-VAN Yojana / Advanced Biofuels Directly referenced; likely Prelims MCQ source on ministry, timeline, feedstock types
India's Current Account Deficit & Crude Oil Crude is the single largest import item; its price/volume dynamics drive CAD movements

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry for biofuels: Aspirants often attribute the National Policy on Biofuels exclusively to the Ministry of New & Renewable Energy — the nodal ministry is Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (MoPNG). [S5]
  2. Confusing the 2030 vs 2025-26 target: The original 20% blending target was 2030; this was advanced to 2025-26 — exam questions may present the old date as correct. [S5]
  3. Strategic Petroleum Reserve capacity: The "74 days total reserve" and "60 days actual stock cover" are distinct — do not conflate them; actual cover is lower than rated capacity. [S3]
  4. Russia sanctions vs price cap: Russian oil was not under global sanctions but only a G7 price cap — India buying Russian oil was legal. Confusing sanctions with price-cap violations is a common error. [S3]
  5. Hormuz exposure figures: India's Hormuz-routed imports are now ~30% of crude (not 50% or 70%) — the diversification has materially reduced but not eliminated the risk. [S3]

11. Sources