The Grain Ethanol Manufacturers Association (GEMA) today urged the Government of India to pursue a strengthened ethanol blending roadmap to further uplift India’s grain farmers, increase rural incomes, and reinforce the nation’s agricultural value-chains, especially in the context of the transformative Atmanirbhar Bharat vision.
GEMA expressed deep appreciation to the Hon’ble Prime Minister and the Government for prioritizing energy self-sufficiency and farmer prosperity through the Ethanol Blending Program (EBP), under which India has rapidly increased ethanol blending from 5% to 20% in just five years emerging as a global benchmark for agriculture-driven clean energy growth.
“Ethanol is not just a fuel, it is a farmer prosperity engine,” said Dr. C.K. Jain, President, GEMA. “With ethanol demand rising, coarse-grain farmers cultivate maize, sorghum, bajra, guar and other crops are gaining stable markets, higher incomes, and renewed confidence to expand production and productivity. This program has turned previously undervalued crops into drivers of rural growth,” mentioned Dr. Jain.
The 20% blending program currently utilizes nearly 200 lakh tonnes of grain, creating a reliable and remunerative demand ecosystem for small and marginal farming households across rural India. Ethanol manufacturing units have become economic growth hubs, generating rural jobs, strengthening supply chains, and ensuring steady income flow for farming communities.
To keep this momentum strong and ensure sustained farmer gains, GEMA recommended the following policy priorities:
-Scale ethanol blending from 20% to 30%, following Brazil’s successful model
Accelerate Flexible Fuel Vehicle (FFV) adoption to support higher ethanol usage
-Fast-track research and commercialization of Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) using ethanol pathways
-Initiate ethanol blending in diesel to widen the clean-fuel footprint
-Ensure policy protection and support for grain-based ethanol units, which serve as rural economic anchors
-Continue prioritizing farmers as primary stakeholders and beneficiaries in all ethanol-linked decisions
“By strengthening ethanol policy, India can not only reduce crude oil imports but also unlock lasting prosperity for millions of grain-growing households,” added Dr. Jain. “With sustained support, the grain-ethanol industry will continue to be a cornerstone of rural development, farmer empowerment, and economic self-reliance.”











