AUTO

How Many NDA Voters Don’t Support E20 Petrol Rollout?

More than half of NDA supporters do not want to use E20 petrol despite backing the ruling alliance, according to a C-Voter survey. The poll found that 52.5% of NDA voters would not prefer E20 fuel, while concerns over mileage, vehicle damage and fairness to owners of older vehicles remained widespread. Most respondents also favoured keeping both regular petrol and E20 available.

How Many NDA Voters Don’t Support E20 Petrol Rollout?
Govt Trashes Social Media Rumors on E20 Petrol Harmful Effects (Photo Credits: X)
1
2
3
4
5

More than half of NDA supporters do not want to use E20 petrol despite backing the ruling alliance, according to a recently concluded C-Voter survey, highlighting a gap between the Centre's ethanol blending policy and public acceptance. The survey found that 52.5 per cent of NDA voters said they would not prefer using E20 petrol in their vehicles, while only 18.1 per cent said they would. Another 29.5 per cent remained undecided.

The findings suggest that scepticism toward E20 petrol extends across political affiliations. Overall, 55.1 per cent of respondents said they would not prefer using E20 petrol, while just 17.1 per cent supported it. Among Opposition supporters, 57.9 per cent said they would not opt for E20 petrol, while 55 per cent of voters aligned with other political parties also rejected the fuel.

Limited Support for Ethanol Blending Policy

The survey also found limited backing for the government's ethanol blending policy. Across all respondents, 52 per cent said they do not support the policy of blending ethanol with petrol, compared with 22 per cent who support it.

Among NDA voters, 48.2 per cent opposed the policy, while 24.4 per cent backed it. Another 27.4 per cent remained undecided.

Mileage and Vehicle Damage Concerns

Concerns over vehicle performance emerged as a key reason behind public hesitation.

According to the survey, 52.8 per cent of respondents believe E20 petrol reduces vehicle mileage. Among NDA voters, 51.2 per cent shared the same concern, while the figure rose to 55.4 per cent among Opposition voters.

Apprehensions over vehicle damage were also widespread. A majority of respondents, 54.2 per cent, believed ethanol-blended petrol damages most vehicles. The figure stood at 49.9 per cent among NDA supporters and 60.2 per cent among Opposition voters.

Another 14.3 per cent believed E20 damages only certain vehicles, while only 10.9 per cent said it does not damage vehicles.

Older Vehicle Owners Raise Fairness Concerns

More than half of respondents said making E20 petrol mandatory would be unfair to owners of older vehicles.

Overall, 56.3 per cent agreed with that view, including 49.2 per cent of NDA voters and 65.8 per cent of Opposition supporters.

Consumers Prefer Fuel Choice

While opposition to E20 remained widespread, respondents overwhelmingly favoured giving consumers a choice between ethanol-blended and regular petrol.

The survey found 75.9 per cent of respondents wanted both fuels to remain available. Support for consumer choice remained high across political affiliations, including 72.4 per cent among NDA voters.

There was also broad agreement that ethanol-blended petrol should cost less than regular fuel. Overall, 74.5 per cent supported lower pricing for E20, including 75.6 per cent of NDA voters.

However, lower prices alone did not guarantee wider acceptance. Only 40.8 per cent said they would switch to E20 if it were sold at a lower price, while 40.4 per cent said they still would not.

Public Opinion on Government's Rationale

The survey also assessed public opinion on the Centre's argument that ethanol blending will reduce India's crude oil imports.

Overall, 37.2 per cent strongly agreed with the claim and another 19.5 per cent somewhat agreed. Meanwhile, 17.1 per cent strongly disagreed and 14.1 per cent somewhat disagreed.

When asked what they believed was the main reason behind the government's push for E20 petrol, 27.5 per cent cited reducing crude oil imports, 21.3 per cent said supporting sugarcane farmers, and 11 per cent believed the primary objective was reducing pollution.

Rating:3

TruLY Score 3 – Believable; Needs Further Research | On a Trust Scale of 0-5 this article has scored 3 on LatestLY, this article appears believable but may need additional verification. It is based on reporting from news websites or verified journalists (C Voter, News18 ), but lacks supporting official confirmation. Readers are advised to treat the information as credible but continue to follow up for updates or confirmations

(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Jul 13, 2026 08:23 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).