New Biofuels
Policy Allocates ₹5,000 cr for 2G Ethanol
Plants
·
Expands Range of Feedstock Available for
Fuel Production
The Union Cabinet on Wednesday, 16 May
unveiled a comprehensive biofuels policy which, among other things, allows
farmers to divert excess crop produce for biofuels production and sets
aside ₹5,000 crore to help establish second-generation (2G) ethanol
refineries.
The National Biofuels Policy 2018 seeks
to expand the range of feedstock available for ethanol production beyond sugar
molasses, an official statement said.
Sugarcane juice, sugar-containing crops
like beet, sorghum, corn and cassava, and damaged grains unfit for human
consumption, such as rotten potato, wheat and broken rice, can be considered
for ethanol production.
Besides, farmers who are “at risk of
not getting the appropriate price for their produce during the surplus
production phase” can use the surplus grains to generate ethanol which cannot
be blended with petrol, provided they have the approval of the National
Biofuels Coordination Committee, the statement said.
The policy will offer a mechanism to
address the mounting municipal solid waste problem in the country by converting
it into drop-in fuels.
The new policy also proposes a
viability gap funding scheme of ₹5,000 crore for 2G biorefineries, to be deployed over six years.
The scheme will be in addition to other
incentives and higher purchase prices available to 2G biofuels as compared to
1G biofuels (bioethanol and biodiesel).
Oil marketing companies are in the
process of setting up 12 2G bio refineries at an investment of
around ₹10,000 crore.
To source non-edible oilseeds, used
cooking oil and short-generation crops to produce biodiesel, the policy
suggests the setting up of supply chain mechanisms.
To synergise
efforts to improve biofuels production, the policy delineates the roles and
responsibilities of various ministries and departments.
Forex savings
According to the statement, the total
ethanol production for fuel blending in 2017-18 is expected to be 150 crore litres, leading to forex savings of ₹4,000
crore.
There will be considerable
environmental and health benefits, as the use of 1 crore litre
in fuel blending reduces CO2 emission by 20,000 tonnes.
Besides, the use of crop residues such
as rice and wheat straw for biofuels production will further bring down toxic
emissions, it said.
Further, the 2G ethanol refineries will
improve infrastructure in rural areas and create thousands of jobs in plant
operations and supply chain management, in addition to promoting village level
entrepreneurship, the statement added.