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IndiaEconomy13 days ago

Govt cuts subsidised LPG cylinders under Ujjwala from 9 to 4

The Indian government has reduced the number of subsidized LPG refills provided under the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) from nine to four per year due to global supply pressures linked to the West Asia conflict. Domestic LPG prices have been increased twice since the conflict began, with a recent rise of ₹29, bringing the total increase to ₹89. The subsidy remains ₹300 per cylinder, reducing the effective cost for beneficiaries to ₹642 per 14.2-kg cylinder in Delhi. A senior official defended the pricing, stating that the subsidized rate is significantly lower than what would be charged

Indian households continue to pay among the lowest prices for cooking gas globally despite a sharp rise in international LPG prices triggered by disruptions in West Asia , the government said on Sunday (June 7, 2026), a day after increasing domestic LPG prices by ₹29 per cylinder .

The price of a 14.2-kg domestic LPG cylinder in Delhi was raised to ₹942 from ₹913, while beneficiaries of the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) will continue to pay an effective ₹642 per cylinder after receiving a subsidy of ₹300 per refill on the first four refills annually, down from 9 refills announced last year.

The increase follows a ₹60-per-cylinder hike on March 7, taking the cumulative hike to ₹89 per 14.2-kg cylinder. State-run oil marketing companies were estimated to be losing about ₹703 on every LPG cylinder sold before the latest revision.

In a statement, the government said the cost of supplying a domestic LPG cylinder has risen to more than ₹1,600 following a surge in international prices that followed the outbreak of war in West Asia at the end February.

India's LPG import costs are linked to the Saudi Contract Price (CP), the global benchmark for the fuel. The benchmark has risen about 46% since February after disruptions linked to the Strait of Hormuz tightened supplies from the Gulf region, according to the statement.

Despite the increase, domestic LPG prices remain below those prevailing in neighbouring countries such as Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka, and significantly lower than prices in advanced economies, including the United States, Australia, and Canada, the government said.

The government also said India was among the few countries able to maintain uninterrupted energy shipments through the Strait of Hormuz during the crisis, ensuring there was no shortage of LPG or other petroleum products in the country. Domestic LPG production was increased and supplies diversified through alternative sourcing arrangements to safeguard availability, it added.

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According to the statement, cumulative under-recoveries on domestic LPG sales rose to about ₹60,000 crore by the end of the previous financial year, compared with ₹41,338 crore a year earlier. The Union Cabinet has approved ₹30,000 crore in compensation to state-run oil marketing companies to partly offset these losses.

The government said the latest revision balances the need to shield households from volatile global energy prices while ensuring continued availability of cooking fuel across the country.

"The prices of petroleum products in India are linked to the corresponding prices in the international market. The government, however, continues to modulate the effective price to the consumer for domestic LPG. Any household can buy as many cylinders as it needs at ₹942," the statement said.

"A PMUY beneficiary will additionally receive the direct benefit transfer of ₹300 a cylinder on the first four refills each year — broadly the average annual consumption of a typical Ujjwala household, about four refills a year — and so pays an effective ₹642 on those refills; this support is unchanged."

Even a non-PMUY household would pay about ₹700 below the market-linked cost of the cylinder.

Retail prices differ marginally across locations on account of distribution costs.

"What the household does not bear the brunt of is the several hundred rupees a cylinder which the government is bearing. Through a period of sharp international cost increases, that burden has been absorbed upstream rather than passed to the consumer," it said.

While the commercial cylinder used by hotels and businesses is revised automatically every month because its price is a direct pass-through of the international benchmark, the domestic cooking cylinder is not.

"India used to import 60% of its LPG requirements, and the landed cost of that import tracks the Saudi Contract Price (CP) that Saudi Aramco sets at the start of each month. This is an external price over which the Indian consumer has no control," the government said.

Through the West Asia disruption the benchmark moved sharply higher. "Expressed as the 50:50 propane-butane blend used for India's LPG, the Saudi CP for LPG stood at about $543 a tonne in February, before the disruption. Following the closure of the Strait of Hormuz in late February, the April contract price — the first set after the disruption tightened Mideast Gulf exports — rose to $775 a tonne, with propane at $750 and butane at $800, and has since edged up further to $790 a tonne in June."

The blended LPG benchmark has thus risen by about 46% since the pre-crisis February level, the statement said.

"The scale of this is visible in the fully market-priced commercial cylinder: the 19 kg cylinder used by hotels and restaurants sells in Delhi at ₹3,113.50, about ₹164 a kg, after five increases during the West Asia crisis. The domestic household, by contrast, pays about ₹66 a kg after the revision," it said.

"Commercial ga…

Read the full article at The Hindu
Source document: Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY)

3 reports

The HinduIndependentCenter13 days ago
Govt cuts subsidised LPG cylinders under Ujjwala from 9 to 4

The Indian government has reduced the number of subsidized LPG refills provided under the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) from nine to four per year due to global supply pressures linked to the West Asia conflict. Domestic LPG prices have been increased twice since the conflict began, with a recent rise of ₹29, bringing the total increase to ₹89. The subsidy remains ₹300 per cylinder, reducing the effective cost for beneficiaries to ₹642 per 14.2-kg cylinder in Delhi. A senior official defended the pricing, stating that the subsidized rate is significantly lower than what would be charged

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about policy changes and their economic implications without overtly favoring any political side. It includes quotes from an official and provides context about global supply issues and subsidies.

Official sources cited

  • government Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY)
The HinduIndependentCenter14 days ago
LPG price hike: Government says rates in India among world's lowest despite 46% jump in global benchmark

The Indian government stated that the cost of supplying a domestic LPG cylinder has risen above ₹1,600 due to a roughly 46% surge in international benchmark prices following the outbreak of conflict in West Asia. Despite this increase, the government maintains that LPG prices in India remain among the lowest in the world.

Bias read (Center): The article largely relays the government's framing (low prices despite global jumps) without notable counterpoint, leaning slightly toward the official narrative but staying mostly factual.

Official sources cited

  • government Government Statement
The Indian ExpressIndependentCenter14 days ago
Cooking gas gets costlier: Domestic LPG price hiked by Rs 29 per cylinder

The domestic LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) price has been increased by Rs 29 per cylinder.

Bias read (Center): The article reports a straightforward price increase without editorializing, biased language, or selective sourcing. It does not take a stance on whether the hike is justified or unfair, nor does it emphasize any particular perspective.

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentPradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY)
  • governmentGovernment Statement