When Shivtej Agro Industries Pvt. Ltd., a mid-sized sugar mill group from Satara, first considered entering the ethanol market, they thought it would be a straightforward extension of their existing operations. They already had consistent access to B-heavy molasses and cane juice, and the management believed ethanol production would secure long-term revenue beyond sugar.
But the reality looked different.
They faced a maze of questions:
The team lost several months simply trying to piece together scattered information from consultants, government websites, and old project reports.
This guide solves that problem by giving Maharashtra entrepreneurs a single, structured, compliance-focused blueprint for setting up an ethanol plant—without the confusion or second-guessing.

Maharashtra is not just a sugar powerhouse—it is one of India’s most strategically positioned states for ethanol manufacturing. Over the past decade, the state has built a strong pipeline of distillery projects, thanks to its:
The ethanol blending market has shifted from being policy-driven to becoming demand-driven, with Oil Marketing Companies requiring consistent supply to meet the national E20 blending target. Maharashtra’s agricultural economy perfectly aligns with this demand.
For a business owner, this means Maharashtra provides both raw material security and stable long-term demand—a rare combination in industrial manufacturing.
Maharashtra’s ethanol policy landscape has undergone a significant transformation. The recent multi-feed and dual-feed distillery provisions have given entrepreneurs the flexibility they lacked earlier.
1. Multi-Feed Distillery Permission
Businesses can use multiple feedstocks such as:
This ensures year-round production, protecting profitability during off-season months.
2. Dual-Feed Conversion Approval
Existing molasses-based distilleries can now convert into dual-feed units with simplified approval routes. This drastically improves utilisation rates.
3. Simplified State Excise Processes
Licensing is increasingly online, with clear categories for distilleries, storage, and transportation.
4. Industrial Facilitation via MAITRI
Maharashtra’s single-window system supports:
Policies that allow flexible feedstock usage reduce the biggest risk factor in ethanol manufacturing: raw material volatility. When one feedstock becomes expensive or scarce, plants can pivot without shutting down.
Choosing the right district is as critical as choosing the right technology. In Maharashtra, raw materials and industrial infrastructure vary significantly across regions.
These regions have high sugarcane production and strong mill infrastructure:
They are ideal for entrepreneurs expanding from sugar milling to ethanol production.
The growing maize and rice ecosystems make these districts suitable:
These districts support dual-feed plants that operate round-the-year, thanks to grain logistics networks.
Feedstock availability is the backbone of ethanol plant feasibility.
| Feedstock Type | Maharashtra Availability | Cost Stability | Ideal Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sugarcane Juice | High in Western MH | Moderate (seasonal) | Integrated sugar mills |
| B-Heavy Molasses | Very high | Stable | Most 60–120 KLPD plants |
| C-Heavy Molasses | Medium | Stable | Traditional distilleries |
| Maize | Medium–High in Vidarbha | Variable | Dual-feed 90–120 KLPD units |
| Damaged Grain | High across supply chains | Variable | Grain distilleries |
| Broken Rice | Medium | Stable | Grain-based ethanol plants |
Entrepreneurs often underestimate feedstock logistics. A plant located 40 km closer to molasses or grain centers can save crores annually in procurement and transport.
This is the most crucial part of the ethanol setup journey. One misstep in sequencing approvals can delay your project by months.
Entrepreneurs often start technical design before land compliance, which causes rework and delays. Always finalise land before layout.
Every ethanol plant requires:
EC involves detailed studies on:
This is typically the longest approval step and can take 4–6 months.
Depending on plant type, the following may apply:
Excise is highly procedural. Proper documentation and plant layout significantly reduce inspection cycles.
Safety and environmental compliance directly influence your operational credibility and bank financing.
Costs vary depending on technology, feedstock, capacity, and ZLD requirements.
| Capacity | Estimated CAPEX | Practical Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 45 KLPD | ₹65–90 crore | Suitable for grain-based startups |
| 60 KLPD | ₹85–120 crore | Common for sugar mills diversifying |
| 90 KLPD | ₹120–170 crore | Popular dual-feed size |
| 120 KLPD | ₹160–220 crore | Requires strong feedstock linkages |
| 300 KLPD | ₹350–450 crore+ | Large multi-feed commercial units |
Most first-time investors underestimate the cost of ZLD. In some cases, ZLD accounts for up to 20% of total capex. Proper engineering can cut these costs without compromising compliance.
Selecting the right technology is the foundation of operational efficiency.
These are proven, stable, and preferred by most Maharashtra investors.
These plants require higher investment and advanced technology. Suitable for large corporates, not typical SMEs.
Capacity planning should always be tied to feedstock assurance and water availability.
Ethanol receives strong support due to national energy security goals.
A typical ethanol plant repays investment in 4–6 years when feedstock and incentives align. Delayed incentive applications can reduce project IRR significantly.
Ethanol supply chain requires meticulous planning.
Major depots in Pune, Solapur, Nashik, Nagpur, and Mumbai ensure quick dispatch cycles to OMCs, reducing demurrage and turnaround time.
Ethanol is no longer dependent on local industrial buyers. National blending demand has transformed the market.
For new investors, OMCs ensure minimum assured demand, while local industries provide margin diversification.
Compliance is central to ethanol operations.
Authorities can impose:
For many units, non-compliance delays cost more than initial compliance investment.
A clear roadmap simplifies execution.
Analyze cane, molasses, or grain availability within a 50–70 km radius.
Secure industrial-zoned land and begin basic civil planning.
Submit plant layout, water budget, boiler details, ZLD design.
Includes public hearing, risk assessment, and pollution mitigation planning.
Submit plant layout, tank details, feedstock projections, compliance documentation.
Typically 8–10 months for installation and commissioning.
Post-installation inspection and environmental validation.
Receive annual offtake allocation under national blending program.
With flexible feedstock policies, strong agricultural base, and well-aligned industrial support systems, Maharashtra is positioned to remain India’s ethanol capital. For manufacturers, the key to success lies in synchronizing feedstock planning, compliance sequencing, and plant engineering.
Entrepreneurs who get these three pillars right build plants that run efficiently, secure OMC contracts easily, and achieve long-term profitability.
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₹8xx–1xxx crore depending on feedstock, ZLD system, and technology.
Yes. Multi-feed and dual-feed policies permit use of grains along with molasses.
CTE, EC, and CTO are mandatory for all distillery capacities.
Six to twelve months depending on approvals and installation timelines.
Primarily Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs), along with chemical and pharma industries.