A pilot trial for diesel blended with 2 percent isobutanol is expected to begin in the second quarter of FY2027, Girish Wagh, MD and CEO of Tata Motors, stated during a media roundtable on Thursday. A government-led task force, which includes active participation from original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), oil marketing companies and testing agencies, among others, is driving the initiative. Tata Motors is currently coordinating with state-run Hindustan Petroleum to secure the specialised blended fuel for the upcoming tests.
- Isobutanol has a lower calorific value (energy content) than diesel
- A minimal 2 percent blend may have a negligible effect on the vehicle’s performance
The development should be seen in the context of rising ethanol content in petrol, with the base blending level now at 20 percent (E20). Amid fuel supply challenges due to the West Asia conflict, the government recently notified standards for E22, E25, E27 and E30. Plans are now being prepared to further increase blending levels, and the government has also announced the rollout of E85 and E100 fuels.
ARAI to lead 10-month-long assessment
Our sister publication Autocar Professional had reported about how commercial vehicle manufacturers, the Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI), the Council of Scientific & Industrial Research, oil marketing companies and other stakeholders are moving to break a decades-long deadlock in diesel decarbonisation by launching a nationwide validation programme for isobutanol blending.
The ARAI will lead a 10-month technical assessment alongside bioenergy technology major Praj Industries to determine whether isobutanol can serve as a seamless “drop-in” replacement for standard diesel. With nearly all major OEMs expected to participate, the initiative indicates a shift away from problematic diesel-blending trials, focusing instead on a molecule that promises better stability and safety for the nation’s critical transport fleet.
Oil majors such as Bharat Petroleum have been testing isobutanol for two years and recently completed a three-month trial in stationary Cummins engines. They are now committing significant capital to validate data across 33 different vehicle types in India.
Issues in isobutanol-diesel blending
To understand why isobutanol is causing a stir, one must look at the failures of ethanol-diesel blending. For years, engineers tried to force ethanol into diesel tanks, but the chemistry refused to cooperate. Ethanol is a two-carbon alcohol with a “polar” structure, meaning it doesn’t like to mix with the oily consistency of diesel. Without expensive chemical binders, the two fuels simply separate in the tank.
More critically, ethanol is a fire hazard in a diesel ecosystem. Its flashpoint – the temperature at which its vapours can ignite – is a mere 12 to 13deg C. Diesel, by contrast, is regulated to a minimum of 35deg C. This difference puts them in entirely different petroleum safety classes, making shared storage and transport a logistical nightmare. Even with proprietary binders, OEMs were rarely comfortable going beyond a 5 percent blend before combustion issues emerged.
Technical bridge in the making
Praj Industries, the Pune-based bioenergy giant, has spent the last two years building the technical bridge that ethanol couldn’t cross. As a four-carbon alcohol, isobutanol behaves much more like diesel. Its flashpoint sits between 27 and 30deg C, which allows it to stay within the same Class B petroleum category as diesel. This means the existing network of tankers and pumps doesn’t need a multi-billion-dollar overhaul. Initial investigation found that isobutanol remained stable at 10 percent blends for over 40 days without any separation. Early dynamometer trials on standard Indian driving cycles showed that a 5 percent blend slashed emissions with a negligible 1 to 2 percent impact on fuel mileage, a trade-off most fleet operators would take in a heartbeat.
Shift to blended fuels essential for national energy security: Wagh
According to Wagh, isobutanol is a key lever for reducing reliance on imported fuels. While isobutanol has a lower calorific value (energy content) than traditional diesel, a minimal 2 percent blend is expected to have a negligible effect on vehicle performance.
“We do expect that [with] isobutanol, because the calorific value is lower than that of diesel, there would be some impact,” said Wagh. “But 2 percent is hardly anything to have an impact. But we will start these trials.” Emphasising that the shift is essential for national energy security, he remarked, “Energy independence is so important that I am sure... everybody will fall in line and do this.”
With inputs from Uday Singh and Shahkar Abidi.