Energy | The fuel crunch
Supply disruptions are driving up energy costs in India, exposing deep import dependence and raising the risk of prolonged price and supply pressures

SUPPLY STRAIN: People queue up to get refilled LPG cylinders in Nagaon, Assam, Mar. 19. (Photo: AFP)
For Inderjeet Singh Banga, who runs the 20-outlet restaurant chain Pirates of Grill, the Middle East conflict arrived without warning. His outlets rely on high-flame cooking, each consuming about three liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinders a day. When supplies tightened, they began running short within days. “In the first few days, we had to let go of 40 per cent of the business due to LPG shortage,” says Banga.
