JK, Ladakh Fuel Reserves Adequate; No Supply Issues Despite Tensions, Says IOCL

Indian Oil Corporation Limited has confirmed that Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh have sufficient fuel reserves, with no supply concerns despite geopolitical tensions. Stocks of petrol, diesel, and LPG are being maintained at comfortable levels, with refineries operating at full capacity. Additional buffer stocks are available at retail outlets, and officials urge the public not to panic. LPG delivery timelines have slightly increased due to demand, but daily requirements of around 700 metric tonnes are being met.

Key Points: JK, Ladakh Have Sufficient Fuel Stocks; No Supply Concerns: IOCL

  • IOCL confirms adequate fuel reserves in JK and Ladakh
  • 9 days of petrol, 14 days of diesel, 11 days of LPG stock at depots
  • Additional 5 days of fuel at retail outlets
  • LPG delivery times slightly increased to 4-4.5 days due to demand
2 min read

JK, Ladakh maintain adequate fuel reserves; no supply concerns, says IOCL

IOCL assures Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh have adequate petrol, diesel, and LPG reserves despite geopolitical tensions. Officials confirm no supply disruptions.

"As of date, in J&K there are no issues for LPG... all our refineries are running at full capacity. - Ashutosh Gupta, IOCL Executive Director"

New Delhi, April 22

Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh currently have sufficient fuel reserves, with stocks of petrol, diesel and LPG being maintained at comfortable levels despite ongoing geopolitical tensions, an Indian Oil Corporation Limited official said.

Speaking to ANI, Ashutosh Gupta, Executive Director and State Head of IOCL, said there were no supply issues in the region, and refineries were operating at full capacity.

"As of date, in J&K there are no issues for LPG. In our LPG bottling plants, there are almost 11 days of stocks left and apart from this, there is around 2 days of stocks with the distributors. Regarding petrol, diesel, and LPG--all our refineries are running at full capacity," he said.

Highlighting the current stock position, Gupta said, "When we talk specifically about J&K and Ladakh, as on date, our depots and terminals have a stock of about 9 days of petrol, 14 days of diesel and 11 days of LPG at the depots and the bottling plants."

He added that additional buffer stocks were also available at the retail level. "Apart from this, all the retail outlets and the LPG agencies also have a stock which is typically varying from 5 days of petrol, diesel and 2 to 3 days of LPG stock," Gupta noted.

Reassuring consumers, Gupta said the stock levels were in line with normal supply cycles. "Sometimes it gives you a feeling that the stock is only for 9 days or 15 days, but this used to be the stock even before the conflict time. So these are the stocks there which are regularly being recouped from the supply sources," he said.

He also urged the public not to panic. "We will make every effort to deliver cylinders to your homes as quickly as possible," he added.

Gupta further said that LPG supply in the region remains stable despite a rise in demand, though delivery timelines have slightly increased. "Earlier, it used to be one to two days. Now it has increased to four to four and a half days in this region," he said.

He noted that the daily LPG requirement of around 700 metric tonnes in Jammu and Kashmir is being met, adding that current inventory levels and supply mechanisms provide sufficient cushion for the region.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

M
Michael C
Interesting perspective from an outsider's view. In Canada, we'd have strategic reserves for months, not days, for northern/remote regions. But I guess India's logistics are different given the terrain and population density. Still, 11 days LPG stock seems low for winter months in Ladakh when demand spikes. Hope the government has contingency plans.
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Nisha Z
Finally some sensible news! No need to panic buy like last time when rumors spread about fuel shortage. I remember in 2020 during the lockdown, people in Srinagar were hoarding petrol like crazy. The IOCL official is right - these are normal stock levels that get replenished regularly. But delivery time increasing from 1-2 days to 4-5 days for LPG is concerning. Hope they fix that soon.
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Arjun K
As someone living in Leh, I can tell you winters here are no joke. Last year, LPG delivery took 6 days even in November when roads were clear. Now they're saying 4-4.5 days? That's actually an improvement! But seriously, we need more than 11 days buffer for LPG in Ladakh. When the Khardung La pass closes, we're cut off for weeks. Good that they're reassuring people, but ground reality needs better planning.
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David E
Respectfully, this seems like a PR exercise. 'No supply concerns' but delivery time has doubled from 1-2 days to 4-5 days? That's a 150% increase! And 9 days of petrol for a region that relies entirely on road transport? In the US, we'd have emergency reserves for at least 30 days for strategic locations. The IOCL should be more honest about the actual stress on the supply chain rather than sugar-coating it.

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