INDIA will start rolling out petrol blended with 85 per cent ethanol (E85) that will be about 20 rupees per litre cheaper than regular E20 fuel, Oil Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said yesterday.
Indian automakers have started launching flex-fuel vehicles that are compatible with the higher ethanol variant.
E85 fuel will be cheaper than E20 due to its lower calorific value, Puri said. E20 sells for about 102 rupees ($1.07) per litre in New Delhi.
India plans to roll out E85 at 50 to 100 fuel stations in 2026, scaling up to around 5,000 outlets by 2027, he added.
E85 fuel is intended for flex-fuel vehicles, which can operate on petrol blended with high amounts of ethanol.
Puri said automakers and automobile industry associations are on board for the launch.
Automakers such as Maruti Suzuki and Hero MotoCorp have rolled out flex-fuel compatible variants of their popular WagonR and Splendor models.
E85 fuel will help cut pollution and reduce the country’s reliance on imported oil, Puri said.
India, the world’s third-largest oil importer and consumer, currently sells petrol blended with 20pc ethanol.
Earlier in April, India proposed allowing higher ethanol blends such as E85 and E100 under vehicle rules.
The move followed its 2025 achievement of 20pc ethanol blending and aims to further reduce reliance on fuel imports.