Biodiesel in India: value chain organisation and policy options for rural development
            Altenburg, Tilman / Hildegard Dietz / Matthias Hahl / Nikos Nikolidakis / Christ
            Studies
            
                    (43)
                
            
            
                
Bonn: German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE) 
            
            
                
                    ISBN: 978-3-88985-379-0
                
                
                
                    Price: 10 € 
  
                    
                    
                    
                    
                
            
            
            India promotes the production of biodiesel from  tree-borne oilseeds. This is seen as an option for substituting fossil  fuels, reducing CO2 emissions, afforesting wastelands, and generating  rural employment. Critics, however, claim that it may lead to food  scarcity and seizure of common lands by corporate investors. This report  shows that biodiesel production in India has mainly positive effects.  As it is promoted on the basis of non-edible oil seeds on marginal  lands, the risks of driving up prices for edible oil or crowding out  food production are relatively low. However, the actual development  effects may vary greatly, depending on how value chains are organized.  This study identifies 13 different ways of organizing biodiesel value  chains, ranging from cultivation on large plantations to contract  farming, smallholder production for rural electrification, and social  forestry projects – each of them having different effects on income  generation, participation and empowerment, food security, natural  resources management, and climate change. To date, biodiesel production  is not a lucrative business, except for some niche markets. This may  change in the future, depending on fossil fuel prices, government  pricing policies, and agricultural yields. The study describes and  assesses a range of federal and state policies aimed at enhancing the  economic viability of biodiesel production and ensuring positive  development effects.