A carefully calibrated strategy that integrates advanced biofuels, gradual electrification, and sustained investments in infrastructure and flex fuel ecosystems will be crucial in building an energy framework that is not only sustainable but also resilient, adaptive, and self-reliant. 

A carefully calibrated strategy that integrates advanced biofuels, gradual electrification, and sustained investments in infrastructure and flex fuel ecosystems will be crucial in building an energy framework that is not only sustainable but also resilient, adaptive, and self-reliant. 
| Photo Credit: MURALI KUMAR K.

Recent geopolitical tensions in West Asia have once again exposed the structural fragilities embedded within the global energy architecture, particularly for economies that remain heavily dependent on imported fossil fuels. For India, which meets nearly 85% of its crude oil requirement through imports, such disruptions are not distant geopolitical disturbances but immediate macroeconomic stress that manifests through inflationary pressures, fiscal imbalances, and a widening current account deficit.

Projections by NITI Aayog suggest that India’s energy demand will expand at one of the fastest rates globally in the coming decades, thereby deepening its exposure to global supply uncertainties unless diversification is pursued with strategic urgency. Historical experience reinforces this vulnerability, as episodes of instability in West Asia have repeatedly precipitated sharp spikes in crude prices and underscored the imperative of reducing import dependence. Against this backdrop, ethanol blending has emerged not merely as a policy instrument but also as a strategic lever within India’s evolving energy transition, anchored in domestic capacity and aligned with broader environmental and development priorities.


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