Qatar Gas Crisis Hits India: City Gas Sales to Drop 8-10%, Says Crisil

Supply disruptions from West Asia, particularly a force majeure declaration by Qatar, are projected to reduce India's daily city gas sales volumes by 8-10%. The industrial and commercial PNG segment is most vulnerable due to its reliance on imported LNG, while CNG and domestic users are shielded by government-mandated priority allocation. Asian spot prices have surged, doubling to USD 19-20 per MMBtu, creating immediate cost pressure. However, Crisil notes the industry's credit resilience is supported by healthy balance sheets, strong sponsors, and the ability to pass on costs.

Key Points: West Asia Disruptions to Cut India's City Gas Sales by 8-10%

  • Qatar force majeure hits 45% of LNG imports
  • I&C PNG segment bears the brunt
  • CNG & domestic PNG protected by govt priority
  • Asian spot prices nearly double
  • Credit profiles cushioned by strong balance sheets
3 min read

West Asia supply disruptions to impact India's daily city gas sales by 8-10%: Crisil Ratings

Crisil Ratings warns Qatar supply halt will reduce India's daily city gas volumes. CNG & domestic users protected, but industry faces major curtailment.

"The industry's daily sales volume is expected to decline by 8-10% primarily due to curtailment of natural gas supply to I&C customers. - Ankit Hakhu, Crisil Ratings"

New Delhi, March 13

Ongoing disruptions in West Asia are expected to impact the Indian City Gas Distribution industry, with daily sales volumes projected to moderate by 8-10 per cent as natural gas supplies face a squeeze.

As per a press release by Crisil Ratings, the supply chain remains under pressure, and the ability of players to pass through cost increases to end consumers is likely to cushion overall profitability.

The Industrial and Commercial (I&C) segment of Piped Natural Gas (PNG) is set to bear the brunt of this volatility due to its heavy reliance on imported Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG). In contrast, Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) and domestic PNG segments, which account for roughly 70 per cent of industry volumes, remain relatively protected.

These sectors rely primarily on domestic gas and have been designated as high-priority areas for allocation under the Essential Commodities Act, 1955, following a government notification on March 9, 2026.

According to the Crisil Ratings, the conflict has severely constrained imports, particularly from Qatar. As a major supplier accounting for nearly 45 per cent of India's LNG imports, Qatar declared force majeure on international deliveries after production halted at its Ras Laffan facility. This development has triggered a domino effect, leading several major Indian gas traders to invoke force majeure as they struggle to secure scheduled cargoes.

Ankit Hakhu, Director, Crisil Ratings, said, "The industry's daily sales volume is expected to decline by 8-10% primarily due to curtailment of natural gas supply to I&C customers. This is despite likely government support to CGD companies to reduce curtailment to I&C customers from the current level of 40-50%. Meanwhile, Indian gas traders are seeking alternative sources to offset reduced LNG supply. However, limited excess supply in the export market and elevated spot prices pose a challenge. LNG facilities of key exporters are operating at 90-95% capacity (224 MTPA), leaving limited room for additional global supply (10-20 MTPA) to offset the absence of Qatar's 77-80 MTPA export volumes, if the situation prolongs."

Pricing dynamics for the PNG-I&C segment are under significant pressure as the Asian spot market prices jumped to USD 19-20 per MMBtu, nearly doubling from USD 10-11 per MMBtu in February 2026. Because these contracts are often linked to Brent crude or spot rates, the reduction in supply creates immediate input cost pressure. However, the report suggested that CGD players maintain the flexibility to pass these costs to customers, preventing a major collapse in margins.

Gauri Gupta, Team Leader, Crisil Ratings, said, "While the impact on operating margins is expected to be limited, the operating cash accruals of CGD players may moderate due to impact on volumes. However, credit profiles will be cushioned by healthy balance sheets of the players. The ratio of debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation is estimated to be ~1.0 time this fiscal as a result of larger players being debt free, with obligations towards annual capital expenditure and debt repayments being staggered over the medium term. Moreover, liquidity greater than 9 months of debt servicing and support from sponsors with strong credit profiles will provide resilience against near-term shocks."

The industry's credit resilience is further bolstered by liquidity buffers exceeding nine months of debt servicing and support from strong corporate sponsors. Nevertheless, the report noted that the situation remains fluid, and any sustained demand-supply disequilibrium or further spikes in spot prices will require close monitoring.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
This is worrying for small industries. My uncle runs a ceramic unit in Morbi and they switched to PNG for cleaner fuel. If their supply gets cut by 40-50% and costs double, how will they survive? The "ability to pass on costs" isn't so easy for MSMEs. 😟
R
Rohit P
Shows our over-dependence on imports, especially from one region. Time to double down on domestic exploration and renewable energy. We have sun and wind in abundance, let's use it! Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
G
Gauri Gupta
(Note: This is a different person, not the Crisil official). As a finance professional, I find the report balanced. The debt-to-EBITDA ratio of ~1.0 is very healthy. It means the sector can absorb this shock without major defaults. A sensible analysis.
M
Michael C
Working in Mumbai, the CNG queues are already getting longer. Hope the "limited impact" on CNG holds true. If autorickshaw and taxi fares go up because of this, it will hit the daily commute for millions.
S
Sneha F
While the report is reassuring for credit profiles, I respectfully disagree on the ease of passing costs. In a competitive market, industries can't just raise prices. They'll absorb the hit and margins *will* suffer. The pain is being understated for the I&C segment.

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