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Delhi to Bengaluru, eateries feel the heat as black marketing of LPG cylinders surges

Not meant for commercial use, domestic LPG cylinders are lifeline for roadside eateries

Two friends who run a streetside food stall in Yusuf Sarai in New Delhi had reason to feel both relieved and robbed. After three days of searching, they had finally found a gas cylinder. The price their distributor quoted stopped them in their tracks: Rs 2,500, nearly two-and-a-half times what they paid before. A war being fought thousands of kilometres away, in the deserts and straits of West Asia, had just arrived at their stall.

They are far from alone.

The blocking of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical chokepoints for energy supply, has sent shockwaves rippling through India’s supply chains with a speed and intimacy that few anticipated. Tile factories in Gujarat have gone quiet. Restaurants across the country have shuttered or retreated to skeletal menus. And in the back lanes and food courts of Indian cities, a black market in cooking gas has quietly taken hold.

The price of a 14.2-kg domestic LPG cylinder in Delhi has climbed to Rs 913, up from Rs 853 – a rise of Rs 60 – while commercial cylinder prices have jumped by Rs 115 to Rs 1,884.50 (for a 19 kg cylinder). The Centre has sought to reassure households that no shortage is imminent, pointing to a 25% increase in domestic LPG production.

But for the restaurants, dhabas, and cloud kitchens that keep urban India fed, those assurances have done little to ease conditions on the ground.

For commercial establishments, cylinders are simply not arriving through official channels. The eateries The Indian Express spoke to said the black market is now the only viable route to procurement – at prices that are frequently more than double the regulated rate. For smaller scale operations, like the one the two friends run in Yusuf Sarai, they rely on domestic cylinders largely, and even those cylinders are being sold at a 100-150% premium. Though using domestic LPG for commercial operations is not legally permissible, many small-scale roadside eateries rely on them since they are cheaper than commercial LPG.