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Maruti Suzuki Challenges Consumer Court Order Over Ethanol-Damaged Car

Published Jul 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • Maruti Suzuki is appealing a consumer court ruling that orders it to replace a car with engine problems allegedly caused by ethanol-blended fuel.
  • India hit its target of mixing 20% ethanol into gasoline five years early, reaching the milestone in 2025.
  • The government is now weighing whether to push the ethanol blend even higher, while other countries ramp up biofuels amid global energy disruptions.

The Dispute Over a Damaged Engine

A car buyer in Raipur, Chhattisgarh, went to a consumer court after repeated engine troubles. The court ruled in the customer's favor, requiring Maruti Suzuki to provide a replacement car.

Maruti Suzuki said it will challenge the order. The company says the car was already compatible with E20 fuel, which is gasoline blended with 20% ethanol. It argues the problem was not the car but the fuel itself.

Maruti Suzuki contends that its cars are designed for E20 and that a fuel sample from the customer's vehicle showed contamination, absolving the company of liability.

"There is evidence of contamination in the fuel collected from the customer's vehicle," Maruti Suzuki said in a statement.

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The automaker plans to appeal. It said it will "take necessary steps to challenge the impugned order before appropriate higher forum in accordance with law."

The Ethanol Push That Changed the Timeline

This case did not happen in a vacuum. India has been pushing hard to add more ethanol to its gasoline for years. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has backed biofuels as a signature policy.

Authorities are currently considering whether to raise the required ethanol proportion even higher. The conflict between the US and Iran disrupted energy supplies, leading nations like Indonesia and Vietnam to accelerate their own biofuel initiatives.

Automakers and officials have rejected worries over E20 as baseless, noting that the fuel mixture was thoroughly tested prior to its introduction across the country. According to local news outlets, law enforcement in India has filed cases against certain social media figures for their statements about E20.

Both Hardeep Singh Puri, the country's oil minister, and Nitin Gadkari, the transport minister, have supported the ethanol initiative, saying that worries from consumers are due to false information. Their public stance aligns with the government's broader push to reduce crude oil imports and support sugarcane farmers.

India's ethanol blending program is a cornerstone of its energy security and agricultural policy, designed to cut crude oil imports and boost sugarcane farmers' incomes. The government has insisted that E20 fuel underwent rigorous testing on a broad range of vehicles before its nationwide launch. Nonetheless, incidents like the Raipur case highlight persistent consumer concerns about compatibility and fuel quality.

The legal appeal by Maruti Suzuki will likely clarify how liability is apportioned when fuel contamination is alleged. As the appeal proceeds, stakeholders will be watching closely to see how courts balance consumer rights, manufacturer warranties, and fuel standards. The outcome could set a precedent for similar disputes as India pushes deeper into biofuels.

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