Centre ensuring steady flow of cooking gas during turbulent times: Nirmala Sitharaman

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India's LPG Supply Security Amid West Asia Crisis — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1955 Burmah Shell introduces LPG in India; later nationalised as Bharat Gas
1965–80s Hindustan Petroleum (HPCL) and Indian Oil (IOCL) expand LPG distribution network
1991 LPG partially decontrolled; subsidy regime formalised
2014-16 PAHAL / DBTL scheme — Direct Benefit Transfer for LPG; ~31 crore accounts linked; world's largest DBT scheme
2016 Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) launched — free connections to BPL households
2019 PMUY extended; target raised to 8 crore connections
2021 Ujjwala 2.0 — migrants get connections without address proof; target raised to 9 crore
2022–23 Russia-Ukraine war → global LPG price spike; India absorbs fiscal hit via subsidies
2025-26 West Asia crisis → Hormuz transit risk; India mobilises domestic refinery diversion strategy [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

LPG — Composition & Classification - LPG = Liquefied Petroleum Gas: primarily propane (C₃H₈) and butane (C₄H₁₀), byproducts of natural gas processing and crude oil refining. - Also includes propylene and butylene streams diverted from petrochemical complexes.

India's LPG Demand-Supply Structure - India imports ~65% of LPG consumed domestically. [S1] - Of total LPG imports, ~90% transit the Strait of Hormuz (between Iran and Oman). [S1] - Major supply sources: Saudi Arabia (Saudi Aramco), UAE, Kuwait, Iran (historically).

Key Government Interventions (March 2026) - MoPNG directed oil refineries and petrochemical complexes to maximise LPG output by diverting propane, butane, propylene, and butane streams to the LPG pool. [S1] - Result: Domestic LPG production increased by approximately 25%. [S1]

Implementing Bodies - Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (MoPNG) — nodal ministry. - Public Sector Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs): IOCL, HPCL, BPCL. - Refining & petrochemicals: ONGC, Reliance Industries, MRPL, HMEL.

Key Schemes - PMUY (Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana): free LPG connections to BPL women. Launched 1 May 2016; target 9 crore connections. - PAHAL (DBTL): subsidy directly to bank accounts; world's largest DBT programme (Guinness record 2015). - Give It Up: voluntary subsidy surrender campaign.

Fertiliser Linkage (same statement) - India has sufficient fertiliser stocks for Kharif 2026. [S1] - Global bidding for nutrients (fertilisers) for Rabi 2026-27 season to begin soon. [S1] - Fertiliser imports also transit West Asian sea lanes → shared geopolitical risk.


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. 90% of India's LPG imports pass through the Strait of Hormuz. [S1]
  2. India imports approximately 65% of its total LPG consumption; only ~35% is domestically produced. [S1]
  3. The government directed oil refineries to divert propane, butane, propylene streams to the LPG pool to boost domestic supply. [S1]
  4. Domestic LPG production ramped up by approximately 25% following the March 2026 refinery directive. [S1]
  5. PMUY (Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana) was launched on 1 May 2016 to provide free LPG connections to BPL women.
  6. PAHAL/DBTL holds a Guinness World Record (2015) as the world's largest Direct Benefit Transfer scheme.
  7. The Appropriation Bill debate in Rajya Sabha was the forum in which FM Sitharaman's March 2026 LPG statement was made. [S1]
  8. LPG = Liquefied Petroleum Gas = primarily propane + butane (byproducts of crude oil refining / natural gas processing).
  9. The Strait of Hormuz lies between Iran and Oman; it is the world's most critical oil chokepoint.
  10. India's Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (MoPNG) is the nodal ministry for LPG supply and pricing policy.
  11. Ujjwala 2.0 allows migrant workers to obtain LPG connections without a permanent address proof — a key relaxation from original PMUY.
  12. Finance Minister Sitharaman confirmed India has sufficient fertiliser stocks for Kharif 2026 and upcoming bidding for Rabi 2026-27 nutrients. [S1]
  13. The government's strategy combined import continuity (steady shipping lanes) with supply-side domestic production increase — dual-track approach. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Specific Syllabus Heading
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests
GS-III Energy security; infrastructure; food security; effects of liberalisation on the economy
GS-III India and its neighbourhood relations; bilateral, regional and global groupings (Hormuz / West Asia context)

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's LPG import dependence through the Strait of Hormuz poses a structural vulnerability to household energy security. Examine the measures adopted by India to mitigate this risk in the context of the 2025-26 West Asia crisis." 2. "Critically evaluate the role of Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana in achieving clean cooking fuel universalisation. What additional policy interventions are needed to ensure supply security?" 3. "How does India's strategy of Atmanirbhar Bharat apply to energy security? Illustrate with reference to domestic LPG production and fertiliser procurement."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Strait of Hormuz & India's Energy Security 90% of LPG imports transit here; chokepoint geography is a direct Prelims/Mains target
Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY / Ujjwala 2.0) Primary welfare delivery mechanism for cooking gas; eligibility, coverage, and outcomes
PAHAL / DBTL Scheme Direct subsidy transfer mechanism for LPG; flagship DBT example
India's Fertiliser Import Policy & Kharif/Rabi cycle Raised in the same parliamentary statement; Hormuz risk applies equally to fertiliser ships
West Asia Conflict & India's Foreign Policy Geopolitical context for the supply disruption; India's strategic autonomy
India's Refining Sector (IOCL, HPCL, BPCL, MRPL) Domestic capacity to divert petrochemical streams — industrial understanding required
Atmanirbhar Bharat in Energy Overarching policy framework cited by the FM; self-reliance targets in oil & gas
National Biogas Programme / PNG Expansion Long-term alternatives to LPG dependency; sustainability transition

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong import fraction: Aspirants confuse the two statistics — India imports 65% of LPG consumed (not 90%); 90% refers to the share of those imports that transit Hormuz. Conflating them gives a wrong picture.
  2. Wrong ministry: LPG supply and OMC oversight fall under Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, not the Ministry of Consumer Affairs (which handles prices/weights for some commodities) or Ministry of Finance.
  3. PMUY launch date confusion: PMUY was launched 1 May 2016, not during the 2019 election year (though extended then). Ujjwala 2.0 is a 2021 extension.
  4. Appropriation Bill vs. Finance Bill: FM's statement was made during debate on the Appropriation Bill (grants money for expenditure), not the Finance Bill (levies taxes). These are distinct instruments — a common mix-up.
  5. Strait of Hormuz geography: The Strait lies between Iran (north) and Oman (south); it is NOT between Saudi Arabia and UAE. Mixing up Gulf chokepoints (Hormuz vs. Bab-el-Mandeb) is a frequent trap.

11. Sources

Note: Web searches were blocked by crawler restrictions on the allowed domains during this session. All quantified facts above ([S1]) are drawn directly from the verbatim article excerpt provided. Background facts on PMUY, PAHAL, and Strait of Hormuz geography are drawn from well-established public knowledge consistent with PIB/government releases on record up to the knowledge cutoff.