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LPG delays affected 57% of Indian household last week

On Friday, March 13, 2026, a nationwide survey by LocalCircles confirmed the staggering scale of India’s cooking gas crisis: 57% of Indian households reported experiencing LPG delivery delays or encountering black marketing in just the last week.

The crisis, which was a “ripple effect” of the U.S.-Israel war on Iran, has led to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuzโ€”the transit point for 90% of India’s LPG imports.


The “LocalCircles” Survey Breakdown

The survey gathered over 57,000 responses across 309 districts, painting a vivid picture of the “kitchen panic” gripping the country.

  • Supply Failure: 29% of respondents reported that their local dealers explicitly told them “no cylinders are available” or that their booking was indefinitely delayed.
  • Black Marketing: Households reported that domestic cylinders (official price ~โ‚น913) are being sold in the grey market for โ‚น1,200 to โ‚น1,500, as desperate commercial users (restaurants/street vendors) buy them up to keep their businesses alive.
  • The “25-Day” Rule: To manage the scarcity, the government has mandated a 25-day minimum gap between domestic refills in cities (extended to 45 days in rural areas), which the survey indicates has left large families “stranded” without fuel for over a week.

Why the Shortage is Feeling “Sudden”

The crisis has exposed a major structural weakness: India’s lack of Strategic LPG Reserves.

MetricCurrent Status (March 2026)
Import Dependency62% of India’s LPG is imported.
The Hormuz Choke90% of those imports pass through the now-closed Strait of Hormuz.
Storage CapacityIndia has less than 2 days of national LPG reserves.
ConsumptionIndia is the world’s 2nd largest consumer (~3 million tonnes/month).

Government Response: “Priority 1”

Addressing Parliament on March 12, Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri outlined emergency measures to protect household kitchens:

  • Refinery Directives: All Indian refineries have been ordered to maximize LPG yields, resulting in a 28% jump in domestic production in the last five days.
  • Commercial Cap: Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) have cut commercial LPG supply by 80%, allocating only 20% of the usual volume to businesses to ensure households remain “flame-on.”
  • System Collapse: Despite government assurances, IVRS and WhatsApp booking systems in states like Telangana and West Bengal reportedly crashed this week due to a 10-fold surge in traffic from panic-buying.

The “Chulha” and “Induction” Pivot

With the crisis entering its second week, daily life is adapting in drastic ways:

  • Schools and Temples: Chennai’s Dr. MGR Institute suspended classes until March 25 due to the shortage, while the Kashi Vishwanath Temple has simplified its prasad menu to one vegetable dish to save gas.
  • The Induction Rush: Online platforms like Blinkit and Zepto reported that induction cooktops went “out of stock” within hours yesterday as families looked for electric alternatives.
  • Alternative Fuels: In Hyderabad and Kerala, hundreds of restaurants have officially switched to firewood and coal, a move the government has temporarily “permitted” for one month to ease the gas demand.

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