On Friday night, Union Minister Nitin Gadkari signed a file that he says was once dismissed as impossible. The regulations he approved give India a legal framework for E100 vehicles running on nearly pure ethanol taking the country well beyond the E20 blending programme that is now close to nationwide. Speaking at the Sugar, Ethanol & Bio-Energy India Conference in Nagpur, he tied the move directly to rural incomes, naming sugarcane and maize as feedstocks whose demand would rise.
For anyone working in the maize value chain, this is a genuine tailwind. A new class of industrial buyer ethanol distilleries now has regulatory certainty to scale. At RootsGoods, the “biofuel manufacturer” already sits in our buyer mix alongside poultry feed, starch and government procurement. So the headline reads well for us.
But a headline is not a strategy. The same week the E100 news broke, a more sober argument appeared in print one every agritech company riding this wave should read carefully.
The other half of the story
Demand is no longer the problem. Efficiency is.
Writing as a business economist, Ritesh Kumar Singh argued that India’s ethanol push has quietly shifted from an energy-security tool to a way of absorbing distillery capacity that has already been built. India needs 1011 billion litres of ethanol to meet E20 norms, yet installed capacity has run far ahead of that. The challenge, he wrote, has moved from building supply to finding demand.
His second point is the one that matters most for farmers. Grain-based ethanol is water-intensive, and maize sits in an uncomfortable middle of that spectrum.
Expanding maize acreage into water-stressed regions, with imported-fertiliser dependence, can hurt the very farmers the policy intends to help particularly when capacity-utilisation economics turn. As Singh put it, the next stage of policy may need to move beyond blending targets toward a real accounting of water, cropping incentives and resource allocation.
Reducing crude imports is not necessarily the same as reducing external dependence, nor is expanding production the same as improving efficiency. Ritesh Kumar Singh, on India’s ethanol programme
Read together, the two articles define a tension. Policy wants more maize-for-ethanol. Serious analysis says it only works if it is done efficiently and traceably. That gap between the volume the market wants and the quality discipline the market needs is precisely where intelligent technology earns its place.
Where quality intelligence fits
Not every maize lot belongs in an ethanol tank.
Ethanol yield depends on the starch content of the grain. Storage before processing depends on moisture. A distillery does not want the same lot a poultry-feed buyer wants, and a farmer holding a high-starch, low-moisture lot is leaving money on the table if it gets sold as generic grain. The decision of where a lot should go is a quality decision first and a price decision second.
This is the problem RootsGoods has spent eight years instrumenting. Our quality-assessment pipeline already grades each lot on size, colour, fungus, foreign matter, moisture and shelf life from a photograph, the farmer’s location, and bioinformatics. The E100 framework simply adds a new question to that same data: is this lot better routed to fuel, feed, or starch and at what price, today?
This is what our small language model is built to do. A fine-tuned, maize-specialised SLM running on our own infrastructure answers routine questions on pest control, storage, grading, “where do I sell this?” in the farmer’s own language, at near-zero marginal cost. It escalates only the hard cases to a larger model, and every escalation becomes training data. The result is advisory that scales to 48,000 farmers without scaling cost in lockstep.
The sustainability answer the policy will need
Traceable quality is also traceable responsibility.
Here is the strategic point. If the second article is right and the water arithmetic suggests it is then E100 procurement will eventually carry sustainability conditions. Buyers and government will need to show that the maize feeding their distilleries was grown and handled efficiently, not just cheaply.
RootsGoods already tracks carbon saved as a quality parameter and produces a verifiable record per lot. An SLM that advises farmers on water- and input-efficient practices, and attaches a traceable quality-and-sustainability record to each transaction, is exactly the instrument that turns Singh’s critique into a compliance advantage. We do not have to choose between the optimism of the first article and the caution of the second. The technology lets a farmer act on the demand and respect the constraint.
What we are not saying
An honest advisor does not become a cheerleader.
It would be easy to read the E100 news as a signal to tell every farmer to plant more maize for fuel. We will not build a model that does that. The economics Singh describes are real: maize acreage expanding into the wrong land, with imported inputs, can leave farmers exposed when capacity utilisation not demand starts setting prices. Our SLM’s credibility depends on giving the grounded answer: here is the demand, here is the input and water reality, and here is whether it makes sense for your land and your water. That groundedness, backed by a verified database and agronomist sign-off, is what separates us from a chatbot riding a policy wave.
E100 makes maize more valuable. Intelligence makes that value reach the farmer. The policy created a market; quality-aware AI decides whether it becomes a fair one.
India’s move toward ethanol-only fuel is a real opportunity for the maize farmer the largest such opportunity in a generation. The question the headlines skip is the one we have spent eight years answering: not how much maize, but which maize, grown how, sold where. That is a question for data, not slogans. And it is the question our model was built to answer.
