The Compact We
Broke at the Pump
India's fuel pricing crisis is not a supply shock story. It is not an ethanol story. It is not even a fiscal story. It is a trust accounting story — and the ledger has never been more comprehensively overdrawn.
- The Mathematics of the Moment
- The Exhausted Buffer
- The Lazy Tax and the Broken Promise
- The Compliance We Gave, the Relief Never Sent
- The Hidden Toll — What Ethanol Blending Actually Costs
- The Ratchet — A Road Tax Contract Serially Broken
- The Sugar Lobby and the Self-Reliance Myth
- EV Infrastructure — The Convenient Failure
- The Captured Link — When Intent Does Not Survive the Journey
- The Prescription — A Synchronized Architecture
There is a particular kind of exhaustion that sets in when you stand at a Mumbai petrol pump and watch the meter climb. It is not the sharp, sudden anger of a price hike. It is something quieter and far more corrosive — the slow recognition that the number on that display is not the outcome of a market, or even a policy. It is the outcome of a series of political arrangements, legacy debts, commodity lobbies, and fiscal dependencies that nobody in power has had the collective courage to redesign. You are not paying for petrol. You are subsidising the architecture of governmental convenience — and you have been doing so, in ways you cannot fully see, for longer than any single headline will ever tell you.
A Number That Is Real.
An Inevitability That Is Not.
The Strait of Hormuz — that narrow, geopolitically freighted chokepoint through which roughly a fifth of the world's oil transits daily — is under renewed pressure. Crude has crossed $115 per barrel. India's Oil Marketing Companies are caught in a vice of their own structural design: a supply chain that operates on a 30 to 45 day lag, colliding with a pump price that the government — absorbing political risk ahead of elections — has chosen to hold frozen.
The consequence is a bleeding that Kotak Institutional Equities estimates at ₹27,000 crore per month in incremental losses for the refiners. The ₹25-28 per litre figure, now circulating breathlessly through news feeds, is the accumulated weight of that frozen price expressed as a potential overnight correction. It is an analyst's stress-test of refiner balance sheets — not a notification from the Finance Ministry.
The conflation of what the math says with what policy will do is precisely what transforms legitimate economic reporting into a pre-panic the government then feels compelled to react to. The number is real. The inevitability is not.
That distinction matters enormously — because every point of panic that embeds itself into public expectation becomes, eventually, a self-fulfilling permission slip for the very correction the headline warned about.
When the Shock Absorbers
Have Already Been Spent
In prior crude cycles, New Delhi's conventional response was legible and reliable: reach into the excise duty structure, make a visible headline cut of ₹5 or ₹8, signal responsiveness, buy time. That option has been substantially exercised. The Centre has already surrendered approximately ₹10 per litre in excise duty since the last major price correction, absorbing that cost rather than passing it to the consumer.
The buffer is not gone, but it is thin. And a government that has already spent its goodwill capital on price suppression is now facing a supply shock for which the conventional toolkit offers diminishing returns. This is the moment the story transitions — from a crisis of crude markets to a crisis of architecture. And architecture, unlike crude prices, does not correct itself.
The Lazy Tax and
the Addiction It Built
To understand why India is structurally exposed to every single oil price cycle — without exception, without evolution — you have to sit with the peculiar political economy of fuel taxation. What might honestly be called the lazy tax.
Fuel levies require no enforcement machinery, generate no political confrontation, and suffer almost no evasion. Every litre pumped is a litre taxed. The inelasticity of demand — people must move, goods must travel — makes the revenue as close to guaranteed as any democratic government can hope for. It is, from a pure collection standpoint, entirely frictionless.
Tolls do not build new roads. They repay old ones. The road and infrastructure cess on fuel must, therefore, fund the future. And so the cycle perpetuates — loop after self-justifying loop, each justified by the next bridge not yet built.
The Centre levies a Road and Infrastructure Cess kept entirely outside the devolution formula — states see none of it. The states, unwilling to surrender their own autonomous lever, layer VAT on top. In a city like Mumbai, the combined burden of central excise, state VAT, dealer margins, and freight makes petrol among the most heavily taxed commodities in the formal economy. The frictionlessness of this tax has not been reformed. It has been compounded.
The Compliance We Gave,
and the Relief Never Sent
The formalization of India's economy through GST was not painless. Small businesses restructured themselves. Informal operators entered the tax net. Compliance burdens were real, the transition turbulent, the early years genuinely hard for large segments of the economy. The implicit covenant, never written but always legible, was this: formalize, become visible to the system, and the system will, over time, become lighter.
GST collections are now consistently above ₹1.7 lakh crore per month. The tax base has broadened. Evasion has structurally reduced. The system is, by its own metrics, succeeding beyond its own projections.
And yet the fuel cess has not moved in response. The relief was never sent. Neither the Centre — protective of its unshared cess — nor the states — clinging to their VAT autonomy — have chosen to extend the fruits of this success to the most visible, most regressive, most daily tax in the consumer's life.
The citizen who formalized their business, who now files quarterly returns and maintains digital invoices, continues to pay the same fuel tax as if the broader system were still leaking at every joint. The compact was broken quietly — without announcement, without acknowledgment, somewhere in the gap between record GST collections and unchanged pump prices.
What Ethanol Blending
Actually Costs the Consumer
Every conversation about India's fuel crisis focuses on the pump price. Almost none of them focus on what that price actually buys — because what it buys has been quietly, systematically, and deliberately reduced.
The physics are not negotiable. Pure petrol delivers approximately 34 megajoules per litre of usable energy. Ethanol delivers roughly 24 megajoules per litre — about a third less energy for the same volume. At E20 blending — 20% ethanol mixed into petrol — the effective energy content per litre drops by approximately 6 to 7 percent.
The government's E20 programme is presented as energy self-reliance — reduced crude import dependence, lower forex outflow, cleaner combustion. Each of these benefits is modelled on E20-certified vehicles: new engines, ethanol-resistant seals, recalibrated fuel injection maps. The benefits are then broadcast across the entire fleet — which includes tens of millions of vehicles engineered for E10 or earlier specifications, still in daily operation across Tier 2, Tier 3, and rural India.
The benefit belongs to the new vehicle. The cost belongs to the old one. Only one of them appears in the Ministry's press release.
A Contract Written at Purchase,
Rewritten Without Notice
When an Indian citizen purchases a vehicle, road tax is paid as a lump-sum, upfront, long-horizon contract with the state — typically calculated for 15 years of road use. This is not a fee. It is a covenant. The citizen says to the state: here is my money, in full, today — in exchange for the right to operate this vehicle on your roads, under the fuel conditions prevailing at the time of purchase.
The vehicle purchased under E10 conditions was engineered to those conditions. Rubber seals calibrated to tolerate up to 10% ethanol. Carburettors and injectors tuned to E10 combustion. Mileage and performance benchmarks set against E10 energy density. The citizen did not alter those specifications. The citizen held their end of the contract precisely.
The state then moved to E20. No rebate. No compensation. No acknowledgment that the terms of the original contract had materially changed. The citizen did not breach the contract. The state did.
The material degradation is not theoretical. Ethanol is hygroscopic — it absorbs moisture from the air. Higher ethanol concentration accelerates corrosion in carburettors not designed for E20. Rubber fuel lines and gaskets in pre-E20 vehicles were not manufactured to ethanol-resistant specifications. Over time, E20 fuel in an E10 vehicle does not only reduce efficiency — it physically degrades the fuel system. The consumer faces not just a mileage loss but a repair cost — arriving with no warning, traceable to no single cause, covered by no government acknowledgment.
The ethanol programme is, in its distributional geometry, a regressive wealth transfer — from the vehicle-dependent working and middle class, upward to the auto OEM and, as we will examine, the agricultural commodity lobby — laundered through the language of national self-reliance.
The Sugar Lobby and the
Narrative It Captured
India produces chronic sugar surpluses. The states of Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra alone generate more than the domestic market can absorb, and global sugar prices have rarely been generous enough to make exports reliably profitable. The sugar mill sector — politically embedded across the sugar belts of western Maharashtra and the Gangetic plains — needed a guaranteed domestic buyer for its surplus.
The ethanol blending programme created precisely that. Oil Marketing Companies are mandated to purchase ethanol at government-fixed procurement prices from sugar mills and distilleries. The price is set generously enough to ensure mill profitability regardless of global sugar markets. The OMC has no choice. The mandate is not advisory.
The consumer pays for petrol that delivers less energy per litre. The OMC pays the sugar mill a guaranteed price for the ethanol that diluted it. The mill owner books the margin. The "energy self-reliance" narrative is the wrapper. The structural beneficiary is the mill — not the nation.
The political economy of who owns the sugar mills is not an abstraction. The sugar cooperatives of western Maharashtra, the mill-owning families of the Gangetic belt — their overlap with legislative office, ministerial positions, and state government is documented, dense, and generationally entrenched. The ethanol mandate is not the outcome of dispassionate energy policy. It is the outcome of an agricultural commodity lobby finding its most durable subsidy mechanism yet — one dressed in the language of national interest.
The Hormuz shock gets the headline. The sugar lobby gets the margin. The consumer gets neither the explanation nor the acknowledgment.
The Infrastructure Not Built
and the Silence Around It
The government's most credible long-term answer to import dependence and fuel price volatility is a genuinely successful electric vehicle transition. India's two and three-wheeler EV manufacturers are globally competitive. The demand exists. The price points, for entry-level electric two-wheelers, are within reach of the middle-income households most damaged by the ethanol ratchet.
And yet the charging and battery-swap infrastructure for exactly this segment — affordable, sub-₹1.5 lakh two and three-wheeler EVs operating in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities — has not been built with anything approaching the urgency that the stated policy commitment would require.
The neighbourhood transformer upgrades that would enable mass overnight charging in dense urban areas — not funded at the required scale. The battery-swap kiosks that would let a delivery rider swap and continue within three minutes — not deployed beyond pilots. The FAME subsidy scheme, riddled with disbursement delays and eligibility controversies, has not produced the adoption curve its own targets required.
When a government is genuinely committed to a transition, it builds the infrastructure before the demand arrives — because infrastructure is the precondition for adoption. India has done this with UPI. With national highways. With airport capacity expansion. The absence of equivalent urgency in EV charging infrastructure is not a resource failure. It is a priority failure. And priorities, more honestly than any speech, reveal allegiances.
The consumer most damaged by the ethanol ratchet is the same consumer who most needs the EV exit. And the exit has not been built for them. That is not coincidence. That is architecture.
When Sovereign Intent Does Not
Survive the Journey to the Citizen
A republic functions on a chain of trust. From the citizen upward to the elected, and from the highest executive authority downward through every ministry to the last mile of policy execution. What is increasingly apparent — and what must be named with care, without targeting individuals, but with complete honesty about the pattern — is that this chain has a compromised link.
The highest level of India's executive governance has, on multiple fronts, demonstrated a genuine and legible citizen-first orientation. The digital infrastructure built over the past decade, the direct benefit transfer architecture, the consistent attention to the base of the economic pyramid — these are not performances. They are commitments, expressed in programmes that delivered, in numbers that held.
What the citizen is watching — anxiously, quietly, without a language that does not sound like political accusation — is whether that commitment survives contact with a particular portfolio. A portfolio that has accumulated, progressively, authority over roads, vehicles, fuels, ethanol mandates, and EV policy — the entire citizen mobility ecosystem.
There are moments in a democracy when the sincerity of the centre does not survive the journey to the periphery. When a portfolio begins to speak the language of the industry it was created to regulate, rather than the citizen it was created to protect — the gap between sovereign intent and operational reality becomes, itself, a policy crisis.
This is not a personal indictment. It is a documented governance pathology with a specific name: regulatory capture. And it presents in consistent, observable, institutional ways.
The citizen in this story is not questioning the republic's highest office. What they are asking — without the vocabulary, without the platform, absorbed only in the quietly falling mileage of a two-wheeler in Nagpur whose 15-year road tax bought them a fuel contract the state has already unilaterally rewritten twice — is a more fundamental question.
Does meaning well at the top, in the absence of accountability at the operational layer, constitute governance? Or does it merely constitute intention?
The answer, for the delivery rider whose battery-swap kiosk has not been built and whose fuel system is quietly corroding, is plainly, painfully — no.
A Synchronized Architecture —
Five Reforms, One Direction
The fix cannot be a number tweak. It has to be a redesign of the architecture of how fuel is taxed, blended, and transitioned — shifting it from a bottomless well of emergency revenue and commodity subsidy into a regulated, transparent, citizen-first system governed by fiscal discipline rather than fiscal convenience.
The Iron Dome — Price Smoothing Without Shock
An overnight ₹27 correction would embed itself into freight rates, food prices, and inflation expectations simultaneously. The Finance Ministry issues targeted, time-bound financial subventions to the OMCs to cover the per-litre gap — a sovereign bet that global crude moderates toward $80 in coming quarters, at which point OMCs recover margins naturally without the public ever having absorbed the spike. The cost is a temporary fiscal deficit widening. The alternative is a secondary inflation cycle far harder and more expensive to reverse.
The GST Offset Cap — Binding Relief to Compliance
The Centre legislates a cap on the Road and Infrastructure Cess that is inversely linked — by law, not by discretion — to GST performance. When monthly GST collections consistently hold above ₹1.6 lakh crore, the surplus automatically triggers a proportionate reduction in the fuel cess. Not advisory. Not subject to budget negotiations. Automatic and legislated. The taxpayer who formalized their business can finally trace a line from their compliance to their relief. Trust rebuilt through mechanisms, not announcements.
The GST Glide Path — Bringing Fuel into the Tent
Fuel enters the 28% GST peak slab. States retain a strictly capped surcharge — approximately ₹10 per litre — to manage their revenue transition, governed by a 10-year sunset clause with a mandatory ₹1 per litre annual reduction as legacy infrastructure debts are paid down. The discipline is built into the legislation. No discretionary exits. No renegotiation windows. This is the hardest reform in Indian fiscal federalism — which is exactly why it must be named as the destination.
The Blend Freeze — Honesty Over Optics
The E20 mandate is frozen until a credible, independent audit of actual fleet-wide efficiency impact is published — accounting for the full existing vehicle population, not just E20-certified new vehicles. Any future mandate increase must be accompanied by a time-bound vehicle upgrade rebate scheme, funded by a levy on ethanol procurement margins, for vehicle owners whose fuel contracts are being retroactively rewritten. The E100 pathway is suspended as a public announcement until E20 transition is demonstrated to be net-beneficial to the bottom three income quintiles of vehicle owners.
The Infrastructure Mandate — Building the Exit
Public EV charging and battery-swap infrastructure for sub-₹1.5 lakh two and three-wheelers is declared a national infrastructure priority — with the same urgency and capital commitment as highway construction. Neighbourhood transformer upgrades in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities are funded through a dedicated EV Infrastructure Cess levied on new internal combustion vehicle registrations — the transition funding itself from the category it is designed to eventually replace. FAME disbursement delays are cleared within a single financial quarter, or the responsible ministry faces mandatory parliamentary audit.
Every time India's fuel pricing crisis surfaces — and it surfaces with the exhausting regularity of a structural problem mistaken for an episodic one — it is framed as a crude market story, or a geopolitical story, or an election timing story. It is framed, most recently, as a Hormuz story.
None of these framings are wrong. They are simply insufficient. They account for the visible stimulus without accounting for the architecture that makes India so reliably, so repeatedly, so comprehensively vulnerable to every global crude movement — and now, through the ethanol ratchet, vulnerable even when global crude is not the proximate cause.
The full picture is of a citizen who has formalized their economy as asked, paid their road tax in full, watched their mileage fall without explanation, absorbed the corrosion of fuel systems engineered to a contract that was unilaterally rewritten — and who is now being told that the EV alternative, the rational exit from this entire matrix, is coming, just not quite yet, just not quite here, just not quite funded with the urgency the situation would seem to demand.
The sincerity at the apex of governance is not in question. What is in question is whether sincerity at the apex — unaccompanied by accountability at the portfolio level, unprotected against regulatory capture, unverified by mechanisms that bind rather than merely declare — is sufficient to constitute governance in any meaningful sense.
The answer, for the two-wheeler owner in Nagpur whose 15-year road tax bought them a fuel contract already rewritten twice without notice, and whose EV alternative remains stranded in a pilot programme somewhere in a Ministry document — is not a political answer. It is a quiet, daily, arithmetic one.
A government that has collected your compliance, banked your trust, captured your formalization dividend, rewritten your fuel contract without notice, guaranteed the sugar mill's margin at your mileage's expense, and left the EV exit unbuilt in precisely the segment that needs it most — owes you not a press conference, not a phase-out announcement, not another ethanol milestone. It owes you a system that is structurally incapable of doing this again. And it has not built one yet.
Independent policy analysis · April 2026 · Mumbai · All figures sourced from Kotak Institutional Equities, Ministry of Petroleum public data, and PPAC published records. Views are the author's own.