Key Points

India is aggressively expanding its biofuel and natural gas infrastructure with new CBG plants and CNG vehicles. Despite progress, the country still imports 60% of LPG and half its natural gas needs. Petroleum Minister Hardeep Puri emphasized diversification of oil imports across 40 countries for stability. While pushing for self-reliance, he acknowledged energy independence will take years to achieve.

Key Points: Hardeep Puri Says India Progressing on Energy Self-Reliance Despite Imports

  • India operates 113 CBG plants with 73 more underway
  • CNG-compatible cars rising but 50% gas still imported
  • Ujjwala Yojana covers 10.5 crore LPG connections
  • Oil imports diversified across 40 nations for energy security
2 min read

India marches towards energy self-reliance, but imports still crucial: Hardeep Puri

Petroleum Minister Hardeep Puri highlights India's clean energy push but admits 60% LPG and 50% gas imports remain crucial for demand.

"A country like India... is moving towards self-sufficiency, but it's going to take time - Hardeep Puri"

New Delhi, August 8

Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri on Friday highlighted India's strides in clean energy and domestic fuel production, while acknowledging that the country still relies heavily on imports to meet its growing energy needs.

"We already have 113 compressed biogas (CBG) plants operating and another 73 under construction," he said on the progress of bioenergy and natural gas space.

"If you look at the car models coming onto the market, many new ones are CNG-compatible. So that's a success story," the minister told reporters on the sidelines of Pioneer Biofuels 360 Summit here in the national capital.

The Minister pointed to India's liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) distribution as another example of progress in energy access.

"Today, we are running against all statistics," he said. "We have 33.5 crore LPG connections in the country, including 10.5 crore under the Ujjwala Yojana, yet we still import about 60 per cent of our LPG."

While acknowledging the import dependency, Puri reaffirmed that the country is taking decisive steps to increase domestic production.

"Our refineries are going to produce more. We are going to do more in exploration and production (E&P)," he said.

Regarding natural gas, Minister Puri noted that domestic production is witnessing healthy growth.

"Yes, our production is going up by 18 per cent per year, but even there we are still importing around 50 per cent," he said.

Minister Puri stressed on the country's commitment to Atmanirbhar Bharat or self-reliant India.

"A country like India, which has these challenges, is moving in the direction of self-sufficiency, but it's going to take time," he stated. "Meanwhile, we will import, we will increase our production, and we've already diversified our import sources."

India is the world's third-largest energy consumer with a demand of about 5.4 million barrels of oil per day.

India today imports 80 per cent of its oil and 50 per cent of its natural gas needs. India is now importing oil and gas from as many countries as possible, about 40 countries now, to meet its demand.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As an expat in India, I'm impressed by the CNG vehicle adoption. Back home we're still debating electric vs petrol while India is quietly building CNG infrastructure. Smart move given the price sensitivity here!
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Ananya R
The numbers look good on paper but what about rural areas? My village still uses firewood because LPG cylinders are expensive to refill. Government should focus on affordability along with accessibility.
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Vikram M
Diversifying import sources to 40 countries is a masterstroke! After Russia-Ukraine war, this is crucial for energy security. But hope we don't compromise on quality while chasing quantity.
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Kavya N
Why not invest more in solar? We have sunshine throughout the year! 🌞 Bioenergy is good but solar can be decentralized solution for villages. Hope next budget allocates more funds there.
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Michael C
The 18% growth in domestic gas production is impressive. But with India's population and development needs, the demand will outpace supply for years. Need more aggressive targets for renewables.

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