Indian state-run IOC's 301,000 b/d Panipat refinery has received the country's first ISCC Corsia certification to produce sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) which can be sold commercially.
IOC plans to produce 35,000t/yr of SAF made from used cooking oil (UCO) feedstock by December this year, a company official told Argus 21 August, adding that they will source the UCO from large hotel chains in the country.
The unit is part of IOC's planned 735,000t/yr of SAF-blended jet fuel producing plant that would use UCO feedstock at a 4pc SAF blend. The entire plant is expected to be operational in fiscal year ending March 2026, according to IOC's 2024-25 annual report.
IOC, meanwhile, has signed an initial agreement with Indian flag carrier Air India to supply SAF from its completed plant, the firm said in an exchange filing on 19 August, without giving a date for the start of the supply.
IOC is also in the process of building an additional production capacity of 86,800t/yr of SAF, using alcohol-to-jet (ATJ) technology from US startup LanzaJet. The ATJ-SAF plant will use ethanol as feedstock and be ready by March 2028, the report added. LanzaJet plans to begin operating the world's first ATJ SAF plant in Georgia, US, by the end of this year's third quarter following more than a year of delays.
India is one of the top five emitters of aviation emissions among developing countries, according to research from Norwegian University of Science and Technology. The Indian government is discussing mandating 1pc SAF in jet fuel by 2027, which will double to 2pc in 2028.
The Panipat refinery is also undergoing an expansion project to add 200,000b/d in conventional oil product output capacity by 2027.

