LPG Production Jumps 28%, Govt Assures 2.5-Day Cylinder Delivery Amid Crisis

Union Minister Hardeep Puri informed Parliament that LPG production has increased by 28% over the last five days following refinery directives. He assured that the domestic supply chain is fully protected, with the standard cylinder delivery time remaining at 2.5 days. The government has implemented measures like a Delivery Authentication Code system and minimum booking gaps to combat hoarding and panic-driven demand distortion. A committee has been formed to regulate commercial LPG allocation and prevent black marketing, while the government has absorbed a significant portion of recent global price increases.

Key Points: LPG Production Up 28%, Delivery Time Stable at 2.5 Days: Puri

  • LPG production up 28% in 5 days
  • Cylinder delivery time stable at 2.5 days
  • Govt cracks down on hoarding & panic-booking
  • New delivery authentication code system expanded
  • Commercial LPG regulated to prevent black marketing
3 min read

LPG production up by 28 pc in 5 days, cylinder delivery time remains 2.5 days: Hardeep Puri

Union Minister Hardeep Puri says LPG production increased 28% in 5 days, delivery cycle unchanged. Govt cracks down on hoarding, assures supply.

LPG production up by 28 pc in 5 days, cylinder delivery time remains 2.5 days: Hardeep Puri
"The standard time from booking to delivery for domestic LPG cylinders remains 2.5 days, unchanged from pre-crisis norms. - Hardeep Puri"

New Delhi, March 12

LPG production has been increased by 28 per cent through refinery directives in the last five days, and further procurement is actively underway, Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas, Hardeep Singh Puri, said in the Parliament on Thursday.

Stressing that the government's foremost priority is that the kitchens of India's more than 33 crore families, especially the poor and the underprivileged, do not face any shortage, Puri said domestic supply is fully protected, and the delivery cycle is unchanged.

"The standard time from booking to delivery for domestic LPG cylinders remains 2.5 days, unchanged from pre-crisis norms. Hospitals and educational institutions have been placed on uninterrupted priority supply; their access to LPG is fully assured regardless of broader demand conditions," the minister told the House.

He further stated that field reports indicate hoarding and panic-booking at the distributor and retail level, driven by consumer anxiety rather than any actual supply shortage.

"The house should be clear on this: the rush-booking pressure in some localities reflects a demand distortion, not a production or supply failure. Delivery Authentication Code coverage is being expanded from 50 per cent to 90 per cent of consumers; under this system, a cylinder can only be logged as delivered when the consumer confirms receipt through a one-time code on their registered mobile, making undocumented diversion effectively impossible to conceal," Puri said

A 25-day minimum booking gap has been introduced as a demand management measure in urban areas and 45 days in rural and 'durgam kshetra' areas.

"OMC field officers and the Anti-Adulteration Cell are coordinating enforcement at the distributor level. The Home Secretary has chaired a meeting with Chief Secretaries of all states to align state-level administration with the central supply and enforcement framework," the minister said.

Commercial LPG has been regulated to prevent black marketing, not to penalise the hospitality sector, he said.

Commercial LPG is sold in a completely deregulated, over-the-counter market at market price, without any government subsidy. There is no registration system, no booking requirement, no digital authentication, and no delivery confirmation mechanism.

"Had commercial supply been left entirely unrestricted, cylinders purchased over the counter could have been diverted to the grey market at the expense of genuine commercial consumers and domestic households alike. The government has therefore taken the responsible course: to regulate this channel with clear priorities and a transparent allocation mechanism," said Puri.

A three-member committee comprising Executive Directors from the IOCL, the HPCL, and the BPCL was constituted on March 9.

Extensive meetings have been held with state Civil Supply departments and restaurant associations across the country, and are continuing.

"The committee has assessed genuine need by geography and sector to ensure available commercial volume reaches genuine users first. In a major decision, 20 per cent of the average monthly Commercial LPG requirement will be allocated from today by OMCs, in coordination with the state governments, so that there is no hoarding or black marketing," said the minister.

Alternate fuel options are being activated to ease pressure on LPG and gas channels, he said.

The non-subsidised consumer price stands at Rs 913 following the recent Rs 60 adjustment, against a market-determined price of approximately Rs 987. Of the Rs 134 per cylinder adjustment required by prevailing global market conditions, the government absorbed Rs 74. The effective additional cost for a PMUY household is under 80 paise per day.

"Equivalent LPG prices in the neighbourhood stand at Rs 1,046 in Pakistan, Rs 1,242 in Sri Lanka, and Rs 1,208 in Nepal. OMC compensation of Rs 30,000 crore has been approved against losses of approximately Rs 40,000 crore in 2024-25," Puri added.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The data and comparisons with neighboring countries are helpful for context. It's a complex global situation. The focus on protecting the poor through PMUY and the small daily cost increase for them seems fair. The committee with IOCL, HPCL, BPCL should bring more coordination.
P
Priya S
While the measures sound good on paper, the real test is implementation. In our village, the 45-day booking gap is causing issues for large joint families. Also, who is checking the "panic booking" at distributor level? They often create the shortage themselves. Need stricter local monitoring.
A
Aman W
The Delivery Authentication Code is a brilliant move! This will finally bring transparency. For years, we suspected cylinders were being diverted. If it works as described, it's a major reform. Kudos for using tech to solve a chronic problem. 🇮🇳
K
Karthik V
Respectfully, the minister's statement feels disconnected from the common man's experience. Production is up 28% in 5 days? That's a huge claim. And "demand distortion" is a fancy term for people being scared of running out of cooking gas. The root cause is trust deficit, which needs to be addressed with consistent reliable supply, not just statements.
M
Meera T
Glad hospitals and schools are on priority. That's very important. The focus should remain on domestic users. Commercial regulation was necessary to prevent black marketing, but I hope small dhabas and street food vendors aren't badly affected. They are the backbone of our food culture.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50