Why India must electrify its kitchens

Below is the complete UPSC study note.


Why India Must Electrify Its Kitchens

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2014 LPG connections stood at 14.51 crore (145.1 million). [S2]
May 2016 Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) launched — deposit-free LPG connections to BPL women. [S6]
2019 Ujjwala 2.0 extended PMUY to migrants and homeless.
2021 Power Minister R.K. Singh declared: "Electricity is the future of India; plan to leverage electricity for cooking in a big way to help poor." [S7]
2023 (Jun) BEE + CLASP e-cooking transition conference; NECP announced — EESL to distribute 20 lakh induction cooktops nationwide. [S3][S4]
2023 (Feb) NITI Aayog / CEEW released Roadmap for Access to Clean Cooking Energy in India, outlining shift to electric and solar cooking. [S8]
July 2025 PMUY connections reach 10.33 crore (103.3 million); 25 lakh additional connections approved for FY2025-26. [S9]
October 2025 IEEFA study: Electric cooking 37% cheaper than non-subsidised LPG. [S1]
2025-26 Cabinet approves ₹12,000 crore PMUY targeted subsidy continuation. [S5]

Predecessors: Rajiv Gandhi Gramin Vidyutikaran Yojana → Saubhagya Scheme (2017) for household electrification, which is a prerequisite for kitchen electrification.


4. Core Static Facts

Schemes & Programmes

Scheme / Programme Ministry Key Feature
Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) MoPNG (Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas) Deposit-free LPG to BPL women; launched May 2016
National Efficient Cooking Programme (NECP) Ministry of Power / BEE Subset of Clean Cooking Scheme; promotes induction cookstoves
GO Electric Campaign Ministry of Power Promotes e-mobility and e-cooking
Saubhagya Scheme Ministry of Power Universal household electrification — precondition for e-cooking

Key Numbers

Key Institutions

Enabling geographies: Induction cooktops — urban; Solar-based induction + grid — Tier-2/semi-urban; Solar induction + battery storage — rural (EESL three-model framework) [S4]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social / Gender

Environmental

Geopolitical / Strategic

Scientific / Technological

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12-18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. PMUY was launched in May 2016 with an initial target of 5 crore BPL women. [S6]
  2. As of July 2025, PMUY has 10.33 crore (103.3 million) active connections. [S9]
  3. India imports approximately 60% of its LPG requirement. [S1][S2]
  4. India's combined LPG and natural gas import bill reached $26.4 billion in FY 2024-25 (IEEFA estimate). [S1]
  5. 37% of Indian households still rely on firewood and dung for cooking as of 2025. [S1]
  6. Electric cooking is 37% cheaper than non-subsidised LPG and 14% cheaper than piped natural gas (IEEFA, October 2025, Delhi). [S1]
  7. National Efficient Cooking Programme (NECP) is implemented by BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) under the Ministry of Power. [S4]
  8. EESL (Energy Efficiency Services Limited) — a JV of PSUs under the Ministry of Power — is distributing 20 lakh induction cooktops under NECP. [S4]
  9. The GO Electric Campaign is an initiative of the Ministry of Power (not MoPNG). [S3]
  10. PMUY subsidy continued at ₹12,000 crore for FY 2025-26 with targeted subsidy of ₹300/cylinder for PMUY consumers. [S5][S10]
  11. WHO recognised PMUY in 2018 as a significant public health achievement in reducing indoor air pollution. [S6]
  12. EESL's technology model for rural e-cooking is solar-based induction with battery storage (distinct from urban grid-based induction). [S4]
  13. The NITI Aayog / CEEW Roadmap for Access to Clean Cooking Energy in India was published in February 2023. [S8]
  14. LPG connections grew from 14.51 crore (2014) to 32.97 crore (2025) — a ~127% increase. [S2]
  15. India's LPG import routes are critically exposed to Strait of Hormuz disruptions. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Infrastructure: Energy; Environment and ecology; Government policies and interventions for development
GS-II Government schemes for vulnerable sections; Health; Women's issues
GS-I Urbanisation; Social empowerment; Population and associated issues

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "India's transition from LPG to electric cooking is as much a question of energy security as it is of social equity. Discuss, with reference to the PMUY framework and the emerging electric cooking ecosystem." (GS-III, 15 marks)
  2. "Critically examine the role of the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) and EESL in India's clean cooking transition. What institutional barriers hinder a shift from LPG to electricity-based cooking at scale?" (GS-II/III, 10 marks)
  3. "Indoor air pollution from biomass burning disproportionately harms women and children in rural India. Assess the adequacy of government interventions and suggest a comprehensive roadmap for clean cooking." (GS-I/II, 15 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

  1. Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) — Direct predecessor; understand beneficiary criteria, funding, and refill rates.
  2. Saubhagya Scheme (2017) — Universal household electrification; precondition for any e-cooking transition.
  3. National Smart Grid Mission — Grid reliability and demand response needed to handle cooking load spikes.
  4. Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) & Star Rating Programme — Regulator for appliance efficiency; sets standards for induction cooktops.
  5. India's Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) under Paris Agreement — Cooking sector decarbonisation links to climate commitments.
  6. UJALA Scheme (LED bulbs, EESL) — Template for demand-aggregation model now being applied to induction cooktops.
  7. Indoor Air Pollution & WHO Guidelines — Health dimension; links PM 2.5, black carbon, and cooking fuel.
  8. Energy Transitions Commission / IEEFA India — Think-tank reports increasingly cited in policy; understanding their methodology matters for essay and GS-III.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Ministry confusion: PMUY is under Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (MoPNG), but NECP and GO Electric campaign are under Ministry of Power. Students often conflate these.
  2. PMUY vs. total LPG connections: PMUY has 10.33 crore connections; total LPG connections in India are 32.97 crore (332 million). These are different figures — MCQs exploit this.
  3. "Clean cooking = LPG" trap: The policy evolved — LPG was Phase 1 clean cooking; electric/solar cooking is now the next phase. Do not conflate "clean cooking" exclusively with LPG.
  4. EESL implementing agency: EESL (Energy Efficiency Services Limited) distributes induction cooktops under NECP — not IOCL, not NTPC, not GAIL.
  5. Cost comparison framing: The 37% cost advantage is vs. non-subsidised LPG. Only heavily subsidised PMUY pricing still undercuts electricity cost. Ignoring the subsidy qualifier is a common misreading.

11. Sources