Hotel Association Urges Karnataka to Restore Commercial LPG Supply Amid Shortage

The Karnataka State Hotel Association has urgently appealed to the state government to resume commercial LPG cylinder supplies in Bengaluru, warning of a collapse in food services for common people and heavy losses for the hospitality sector. A delegation met Chief Secretary Shalini Rajneesh, requesting even a partial reallocation of domestic supply to keep hotel kitchens operational. The shortage stems from global supply chain disruptions due to the West Asia conflict, prompting the Union government to prioritize domestic household supply under the Essential Commodities Act. Association leaders highlighted that the crisis not only affects hotels but also impacts farmers and vendors who supply them with produce.

Key Points: Karnataka Hotels Seek LPG Supply Amid Global Shortage Crisis

  • Hotel association warns of cascading public impact
  • Requests reallocation of domestic LPG supply
  • Shortage linked to West Asia conflict, global shipping
  • Govt prioritizes households, invokes Essential Commodities Act
3 min read

Hotel association meets with Karnataka Chief Secretary over LPG shortage; calls for resumption of commercial supply

Karnataka hoteliers warn of food crisis for common people, request govt to reallocate domestic LPG for commercial use amid global supply disruptions.

"If they make it zero, then everything will collapse. - P C Rao"

Bengaluru, March 12

Members of the Karnataka State Hotel Association have urged the government to resume commercial LPG cylinder supplies in Bengaluru, saying that the disruption will have a cascading effect on the common people, along with heavy losses to eateries and restaurants.

A delegation of the association met with Karnataka Chief Secretary Shalini Rajneesh on Wednesday amid the reported shortage of commercial LPG cylinders. The members requested that a portion of the supply be reallocated for commercial use to ensure kitchens across the city continue functioning smoothly.

The Honorary President of the Hotel Association, P C Rao, said that the supply restriction will affect the meals of common people, along with affecting the farmers, as the hotels would have to stop buying vegetables, fruits, dairy and other things due to no cylinders.

"Our requirement is 25 per cent of consumption. 75 per cent is domestic, and 25 per cent is commercial gas, we requested at least give us 12.5 per cent. If am buying 50 cylinders per month, let them give atleast 50 per cent, 25 cylinders. If they make it zero, then everything will collapse. There is no food for Uber drivers, metro working people, IT, and hospital workers. We cannot prepare any food for common people, they will be the sufferers, and with that, our organisation will also lose," Rao said during a press conference here.

"We have heavy rentals, employee salaries, and infrastructure. In addition to that, we buy lakhs of litres of milk, vegetables, farmers' produce, which will also get stuck," he added.

President of the Association, Subramanya Holla, who was also part of the delegation, said that they requested the Chief Secretary to ensure that the problems are conveyed to the Central government too. He claimed that the officials were "not very responsive" to their pleas, and that if even a small amount of domestic supply is reallocated for commercial purposes, it would "solve 50 per cent of our problems"

"Not much of discussion on hotel industry but anyway, we have requested the chief secretary to look into the hotel industry and give a Karnataka representation to the central government saying that atleast one and a half per cent of the gas which is given to residentials be given to commercial (establishments), that will solve atleast 50 per cent of our problem," Holla told reporters.

The reported LPG shortage has emerged amid the ongoing conflict in West Asia, which has disrupted global oil and natural gas shipping. In response, the Union government invoked the Essential Commodities Act to prioritise domestic LPG supply, reserving higher allocations for households, hospitals, and essential services while restricting commercial distribution in several regions.

According to the Union Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, India's crude oil supply remains secure. India consumes about 55 lakh barrels, and through diversified procurement, the volumes secured currently exceed what would normally have arrived through the Strait of Hormuz during this period.

India's total natural gas consumption is about 189 MMSCMD, of which 97.5 MMSCMD is produced domestically. About 47.4 MMSCMD of supply has been affected due to force majeure conditions.

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has strengthened a control room, which is now operating round-the-clock, by including nodal officers from the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting and the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas to facilitate fact-checking and issue immediate clarifications to states and Union Territories amid growing public concerns about LPG availability.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
It's a domino effect. No gas for hotels → no food for people → no business for vegetable and milk vendors. The government's priority for domestic supply is right, but completely cutting off commercial is hurting the local economy badly. Hope the Chief Secretary acts fast.
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Sarah B
While I understand the hoteliers' plight, the article says the shortage is due to a global conflict. The central government has to manage a national crisis. Maybe hotels can temporarily use alternatives like induction stoves for some items? It's a tough situation for everyone.
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Aman W
The officials being "not very responsive" is the real problem here. When livelihoods of lakhs are at stake—from hotel staff to farmers—bureaucrats need to show urgency. Karnataka should strongly represent this to the Centre. This is about survival of small businesses. 💪
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Karthik V
Feel for the hotel owners. Rent and salaries don't stop. But the government's data shows our crude supply is secure. If that's true, then why such a severe cut for commercial? The explanation doesn't add up. There should be more transparency in how these allocations are decided.
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Nisha Z
As a working mother, I rely on ordering from nearby restaurants at least 3 days a week. If they close, it will add so much pressure. This isn't just a hotel problem, it's a common citizen's problem. Hope a solution is found soon!

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