In frames | War lights a kitchen fire
The Hindu
The Hindu collection of images of the LPG crisis: War lights a kitchen fire
When India’s first LPG cylinders rolled into Pune households seventy years ago, many saw them as exotic objects. Burmah Shell, which was to become BPCL later, was the supplier. The large metal canisters that created a cool, blue flame seemed like a luxury in a country dependent largely on firewood and crop residues for its cooking needs. Kerosene stoves were modern innovations then. Some feared what came to be known as just the cylinder many decades later. The infrastructure for delivery was weak, and growth in LPG usage remained tepid. Well into the 2000s, LPG was not the dominant cooking fuel even though the cylinder had become a household name in cities and large towns. A government scheme spearheaded a surge in LPG use. This surge was driven by imports from the Persian Gulf that came down to zero when the West Asia conflict erupted, disrupting Indian life that had yet to shake off the memory of the pandemic.
The Hindu’s photographers have captured images of a population relearning how to cook with energy supplies that are going back to basics. Coal, firewood and everything in-between. Restaurants have slashed items from their menus. Hostels in colleges and schools too are cooking what would be energy-friendly dishes even if they are not the most liked. Induction stoves are selling like hot cakes. Meanwhile, two ships laden with LPG have left the Persian Gulf and are heading to India. But they will supply only two days of India’s imports. India needs at least one such ship to call on its ports every day to return to normal.
Text by Dinesh Krishnan
Global crisis, local impact: People waiting in a queue for LPG cylinders in Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, following shortage in supplies. Although the government has cautioned against panic buying, the queues persist.
Out of work: Amid the fuel shortage due to the war in West Asia, lorries that deliver LPG cylinders from bottling plants to different parts of Tamil Nadu lie idle.
Stocking up: People carry home LPG cylinders on their two-wheelers from a depot in New Delhi.

The U.S. has launched two investigations under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 against India and other economies to examine practices that may be ‘unreasonable or discriminatory and burden or restrict U.S. commerce’. One probe examines whether countries, including India, are using excess manufacturing capacity to export to the U.S. in a manner that hurts American businesses, while another looks at whether countries have taken ‘sufficient steps’ to prohibit imports of goods produced with forced labour.












