Government directs refiners to maximise LPG production for homes

The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas has ordered all oil refining companies operating in India to maximise the use of propane and butane streams for LPG production. This LPG will be supplied exclusively to domestic consumers through IndianOil, Hindustan Petroleum, and Bharat Petroleum. The directive aims to protect household users amid global fuel supply challenges arising from the ongoing conflict in West Asia.

The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (MoPNG) issued an order on March 5 directing all oil refining companies operating in India to maximise production of propane and butane streams for LPG utilisation. These streams must be made available to the three public sector oil marketing companies—IndianOil, Hindustan Petroleum, and Bharat Petroleum—which will market the LPG solely to domestic consumers.

The order explicitly prohibits refining companies from diverting, utilising, processing, cracking, converting, or otherwise employing propane or butane for petrochemical products or other downstream derivatives. LPG, a cooking fuel composed of propane and butane, is to be prioritised for household use.

This measure comes amid a shifting global fuel supply landscape due to the ongoing conflict in West Asia, including the Iran-US and Iran-Israel wars, which are impacting oil prices and supplies in India. The ministry's goal is to safeguard LPG availability for domestic consumers.

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Indian crowds queue for scarce LPG cylinders amid crisis from Iran conflict, with closed hotels and government priority signs.
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Iran conflict deepens LPG crisis: Government escalates with Essential Commodities Act

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Building on March 5 directive to refineries, the government invoked the Essential Commodities Act on March 10, 2026, amid worsening LPG shortages from the Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz disruptions. Commercial supplies have halted, severely impacting hotels, restaurants, and crematoriums across India, while prioritizing domestic use.

The government has ordered households in areas with existing piped natural gas (PNG) infrastructure to switch from LPG cylinders to PNG connections within three months of notice, or lose gas refill supplies. The directive addresses mounting pressure on India's LPG imports amid the West Asia conflict. Petroleum ministry joint secretary Sujata Sharma described it as a supply security measure.

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The Centre has raised commercial LPG allocation to states and union territories to 70% of pre-crisis levels, prioritising steel, automobiles, textiles and chemicals industries. The move comes amid supply disruptions from the West Asia war's closure of the Strait of Hormuz, enabled by higher domestic production and imports from outside the region.

Amid concerns over LPG availability, the Gujarat government on March 20, 2026, clarified there is no cooking gas shortage in the state and urged citizens not to heed rumours. Authorities stated adequate stock is available with smooth distribution systems, including doorstep deliveries to avoid queues at agencies. They promoted technology-driven booking via multiple digital channels for consumer convenience.

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Despite government assurances of adequate supply, food cart owners and households in Delhi report long delays and rising costs in procuring cooking gas cylinders. Md. Rehmat Ali, a biryani shop owner in Chittaranjan Park, said his supplier last delivered on February 28 and has been unresponsive since. Officials stated the situation is under control and launched a control room against black marketing.

India's LPG tanker Pine Gas, carrying 47,000 tonnes of cooking fuel from the Persian Gulf, is expected to dock at Vizag port early Thursday after a route change for faster cargo delivery. The adjustment comes amid shipping disruptions caused by the West Asian war. A Vizag Port Authority spokesperson confirmed preparations are in place.

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Amid LPG shortage due to West Asia conflict, the second LPG tanker Nanda Devi reached Gujarat's Vadinar port on Tuesday morning carrying over 47,000 metric tonnes. Part of the cargo will be sent to Tamil Nadu. The Shivalik tanker had earlier arrived at Mundra port with 46,000 metric tonnes of LPG.

 

 

 

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