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INDIA'S E20 TRANSITION HAS EXPOSED MOTOR INSURANCE'S BIGGEST BLIND SPOT

Mint Bangalore

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June 25, 2026

On 9 June, a blog post from ICICI Lombard warning that E20-related damage in older, non-compatible vehicles could be deemed negligence and excluded from claims triggered a flood of questions.

- SAURABH VIJAYVERGIA

INDIA'S E20 TRANSITION HAS EXPOSED MOTOR INSURANCE'S BIGGEST BLIND SPOT

Policy PDFs quickly spread on WhatsApp, sending people who had never read their insurance documents scrambling through the fine print.

The insurer later clarified that using E20 fuel neither invalidates a motor insurance policy nor amounts to negligence, and that claims depend on the insured peril—not the fuel in the tank. But the anxiety persisted, and one key question remained.

Fuel shift

Here is the real question: when the government changes the fuel standard, does your insurance policy change with it? It does not. India has 36 crore registered vehicles. More than half lack even mandatory third-party insurance. Of those that do, nearly two-thirds carry only the legal minimum cover. Comprehensive insurance remains relatively rare. Most owners discover what their policy covers only when something goes wrong.

The real problem is that if an older, non-E20-certified vehicle suffers engine damage from prolonged ethanol exposure, insurers will not classify it as an accident. Standard motor policies cover accidental events, while gradual corrosion of fuel lines, seals and gaskets is treated as consequential damage (mechanical damage or wear and tear), which falls outside most policies.

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