It's already happening here in Indonesia but for a different reason , economics.
The percentage of avgas as a total of aviation fuel consumed in Indonesia is probably 1 to 2% . Last year it was up to $16 gallon and HARD to get and had to be ordered in 50 gallon drums. It's down to about $6 a gallon now but the damage has been done. The oil companies are winning this battle and to be honest they just don't make a buck out of producing it at the small volumes sold here.
The upshot was 95% of piston twins and anything with a high compression injected engine got parked (and are now slowly being sold off overseas , mainly to Australia) and all the trainers (mainly C-172) have been converted to auto fuel.The standard 'baby' general avaition aircraft now is a Cessna Caravan so the entry costs for new charter start ups are steep (as of 2012 new AOC holders must have 10 aircraft of which 5 must be owned by the company), so while the oil company has had a win the ability to start up a small cargo or charter company and develop routes with a C310 or C402 is gone , the government here doesn't understand how effective GA is in developed countries.
You could probably brew up your own fuel if you changed the category to experimental but you can't go cross country with a piston engine now in Indonesia without pre-ordering drums of fuel at your refueling points.
The biggest danger we have with using autofuel here is unless you buy it direct from the oil companies depots there's a good chance you are getting 80% petrol / 20% kerosene mix as there was a disparity in pricing and the local gas stations would blend subsidised kerosene (6 cents a litre with 60 cent litre petrol) to make a few extra bucks . I blew an engine and cracked a valve in one of my Jeeps before I worked out what was going on and used to carry a gallon tin of Xylene in the car (paint thinner) as an octane booster (chemically its a double benzene and about 112 octane) and worked GREAT but it will eat rubber and plastic fuel lines (mine were all metal lines). The practice was so widespread that the government is now pushing bottled LPG for home cooking rather than subsidized kerosene so that problem is being addressed by reducing the availability of super cheap kerosene to the average householder.
The future of warbirds in Indonesia ALREADY is low compression radials that can run on autofuel and turboprops and jets ! ... so it's not all bad
