DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 21st April 2026

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  • April 22, 2026
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(PRELIMS  Focus)


Civil Services Day 2026: Viksit Bharat – Citizen-Centric Governance and Development at the Last Mile

Subject: Polity – Civil Services; Modern History – Sardar Patel; Governance – Viksit Bharat.

Why in News?

  • April 21, 2026 – Civil Services Day celebrated across India
  • Theme 2026: “Viksit Bharat: Citizen-Centric Governance and Development at the Last Mile”

Why April 21?

  • Commemorates the day when Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel (first Home Minister of independent India) addressed probationers of Administrative Services Officers in 1947 in Delhi
  • Patel referred to civil servants as the “steel frame of India”

Significance of Civil Services Day

  • Annual occasion for civil servants to rededicate themselves to the cause of citizens
  • Renew commitments to public service and excellence in work
  • Celebrated by central government on April 21 every year

Static-Dynamic Linkage

Static (Polity/Modern History Syllabus)

  • Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel: First Home Minister; integrated 562 princely states; “Iron Man of India”
  • Civil services in India: Part of Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) – Article 315-323 (Part XIV)
  • Constitutional provisions: All-India Services (Article 312)

Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)

  • Theme 2026: Viksit Bharat – citizen-centric governance
  • Focus: Last-mile delivery and inclusive development
  • Viksit Bharat 2047 – overarching national vision

Source/Reference:

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/vice-president-prime-minister-greet-civil-servants-on-civil-services-day/article70887192.ece


Core Sector Contraction: 0.4% Decline in March 2026 – Worst in 19 Months

Subject: Economy – Core Sector; IIP; West Asia Crisis Impact; Industrial Production.

Why in News?

  • India’s eight core industrial sectors contracted by 0.4% in March 2026 – first full month after the West Asia war broke out
  • Worst performance in 19 months
  • Growth for full year 2025-26: 2.6% – lowest since COVID-19 pandemic (2020-21)

Source: Index of Eight Core Industries, Ministry of Commerce and Industry (April 20, 2026)

 

What are the Eight Core Sectors?

  • Weight in IIP: 40.27% of Index of Industrial Production (IIP)
  • Sectors (with weights):
    1. Coal (10.33%)
    2. Crude Oil (8.98%)
    3. Natural Gas (6.88%)
    4. Refinery Products (28.04%) – highest weight
    5. Fertilizers (2.63%)
    6. Steel (17.92%)
    7. Cement (5.37%)
    8. Electricity (19.85%)

Static-Dynamic Linkage

Static (Economy Syllabus)

  • Eight Core Sectors: Constitute 40.27% of IIP
  • IIP base year: 2011-12
  • Ministry of Commerce and Industry: Releases IIP and core sector data (through CSO)

Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)

  • First full month after West Asia war – March 2026
  • Fertilizer sector worst hit – 24.6% contraction (input shortages)
  • Crude oil 7th consecutive month of contraction
  • Natural gas only bright spot – 6.4% growth (government push)

Source/Reference:

https://www.thehindu.com/business/core-sector-activity-contracts-04-in-march-2026-on-west-asia-impact-worst-in-19-months/article70884762.ece


Basava Jayanti: Celebrating 12th Century Social Reformer Basaveshwara (April 2026)

Subject: Art & Culture – Bhakti Movement; Kannada Literature; Basavanna; Anubhava Mantapa; Social Reform.

Why in News?

  • Basava Jayanti celebrated with fervour in several districts of Karnataka on April 20, 2026 (Monday)
  • Events included: singing of Vachanas (rhymed prose), colourful processions, motorcycle rallies, religious and cultural programmes

Who was Basaveshwara (Basavanna)?

Time Period

  • 12th century (born: 1131 CE – died: 1167 CE, traditionally)
  • Social reformer, philosopher, poet, and statesman

Key Contributions

Anubhava Mantapa (The “Hall of Spiritual Experience”)

  • Established in Basavakalyan, Karnataka
  • Considered the first parliament in the world – where men and women from all backgrounds discussed social, religious, and economic issues freely
  • Forerunner to modern democratic institutions

Social Reforms

  • Opposed caste system and social discrimination
  • Advocated for equality of all human beings
  • Fought against gender discrimination – promoted women’s empowerment

Religious Reforms

  • Rejected ritualistic practices and blind faith
  • Promoted Kannada language over Sanskrit for spiritual discourse
  • Advocated Ishtalinga (personal linga) for direct devotion

Literary Contribution

  • Composed Vachanas (rhymed prose in Kannada) – simple, direct, and powerful critique of social evils
  • His Vachanas remain popular and are sung in chorus during celebrations

Basavanna’s Legacy

Lingayat/Veerashaiva Tradition

  • Considered the founding saint of the Lingayat (Veerashaiva) tradition

Sharanas (Companions)

  • Worked with other social reformers: Allama Prabhu, Akka Mahadevi, Channabasavanna, Siddharama

Modern Recognition

  • Statue of Basaveshwara installed at the Indian Parliament (dedicated by Prime Minister Modi in 2024) – first time a statue of a social reformer was installed in Parliament complex by the government

Static-Dynamic Linkage

Static (Art & Culture / History Syllabus)

  • Bhakti movement in South India: Basavanna’s Veerashaiva/Lingayat movement (12th century)
  • Anubhava Mantapa: First democratic institution – allowed participation of women and lower castes
  • Vachana literature: Kannada prose poetry; alternative to Sanskrit-dominated religious discourse
  • Comparison with other Bhakti saints: Basavanna (South) vs. Kabir (North) – both opposed caste and ritualism

Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026)

  • Basava Jayanti celebrations (April 20, 2026) – state-wide events in Karnataka
  • Union Minister Pralhad Joshi – attended Hubballi celebrations
  • Vachana singing in chorus – revival of oral tradition
  • Parliament statue (2024) – Basavanna’s national recognition

Source/Reference:

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/basava-jayanti-celebrated-with-fervour-in-several-districts/article70884945.ece


Ethanol 85 (E85) Fuel: Draft Rules for Roll-Out Soon – India's Push for Energy Security

Subject: Economy – Biofuels; Energy Security; Ethanol Blending; E85; E20; ICAO.

Why in News?

  • Government will “very soon” issue draft rules for roll-out of Ethanol 85 (E85) fuel
  • Move accelerated by vulnerabilities in oil exports exposed during the West Asia crisis

What is E85 Fuel?

Definition

  • Fuel blend made of up to 85% ethanol and 15% petrol (gasoline)
  • Distinct from E20 (20% ethanol blend)

Key Features

  • Dedicated engine compatibility required (not for all vehicles)
  • Separate dispensing infrastructure needed at fuel pumps
  • Engines designed for E85 can also operate on lower blends (E60, E50)

Benefits

Greater Energy Security

  • Reduces dependence on imported crude oil
  • India imports over 85% of its crude oil requirements

Reduction in Vehicular Pollution

  • Ethanol burns cleaner than pure petrol

Domestically Produced

  • Made from sugarcane, maize, or grain
  • Renewable fuel source

Current Ethanol Blending Status

E20 Mandate

  • Government mandated sale of petrol with up to 20% ethanol across all States and UTs from April 1, 2026

E20 Flexibility

  • Under 2023 notification, ethanol blending can go up to 27% (not fixed at 20%)

Challenges and Considerations

Competing Demands

  • Aviation sector: India has 1% blending target for international flights under ICAO’s net-zero by 2050 plan
  • Government official stated there is “surplus” ethanol available to meet both demands

Infrastructure Requirements

  • Separate dispensing pumps needed
  • Dedicated engine compatibility for E85 vehicles

Static-Dynamic Linkage

Static (Economy / Science & Technology Syllabus)

  • National Policy on Biofuels (2018, amended 2022): Targets 20% ethanol blending by 2025 (achieved 2026)
  • Ethanol production sources: Sugarcane (C-heavy molasses, B-heavy molasses), maize, damaged food grains
  • Ethanol blending benefits: Reduces oil import bill, supports farmers, lower emissions
  • E20 vehicles: Automakers required to produce E20-compliant engines

Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)

  • E20 mandate effective from April 1, 2026 – all States and UTs
  • E85 draft rules to be notified soon – next step in ethanol blending roadmap
  • West Asia crisis trigger – sharpened focus on alternative fuels after oil supply disruptions
  • Surplus ethanol availability – government confident of meeting both road and aviation demand

Source/Reference:

https://www.thehindu.com/business/Economy/draft-rules-for-roll-out-of-ethanol-85-fuel-to-be-notified-soon/article70884493.ece


Black Panther Returns to Vizag Zoo After 40 Years

Subject: Environment – Wildlife Conservation; Black Panther; Central Zoo Authority; Zoo Exchange Programme.

Why in News?

  • A female black panther was released into an enclosure at Indira Gandhi Zoological Park (IGZP), Visakhapatnam on April 21, 2026
  • Ends a 40-year gap since the species was last on display at the zoo (mid-1980s)

About the Black Panther

What is a Black Panther?

  • melanistic variant of the leopard (not a separate species)
  • Dark coat caused by an excess of the pigment melanin
  • Found predominantly in dense forests of South and Southeast Asia

Characteristics

  • Solitary and nocturnal habits
  • Plays a key role in maintaining ecological balance (apex predator)

Source and Exchange Programme

Origin

  • Brought from Assam State Zoo-cum-Botanical Garden, Guwahati
  • Assam Zoo is the only breeding centre for black panthers in India

Static-Dynamic Linkage

Static (Environment & Ecology Syllabus)

  • Central Zoo Authority (CZA): Established under Wildlife Protection Act, 1972; oversees zoo standards and animal exchange programmes
  • Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I – highest protection for leopards (including melanistic variants)
  • Melanism: Genetic mutation causing excess melanin; common in leopards of dense forest habitats
  • Zoo exchange programmes: Regulated by CZA to maintain genetic diversity in captive populations

Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)

  • First black panther in Vizag zoo after 40 years – last displayed in mid-1980s
  • Assam Zoo as only breeding centre – national importance for black panther conservation
  • Inter-zoo exchange – part of CZA-approved programme for species management

Source/Reference:

https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/energy-and-environment/black-panther-to-return-to-vizag-zoo-after-40-years-formal-release-on-april-21/article70884156.ece


Marine Spatial Plan: Odisha Becomes First Indian State to Launch MSP

Subject: Geography – Coastal Management; Economy – Blue Economy; International Relations – India-Norway Collaboration

Why in News?

  • Odisha has become the first state in India to launch a Marine Spatial Plan (MSP) under the second phase of the India-Norway sustainable ocean management initiative 
  • The state government signed an MoU with the National Centre for Coastal Research (NCCR) under the Ministry of Earth Sciences for implementation 
  • First phase (2021-2022) was implemented in Puducherry and Lakshadweep 

What is Marine Spatial Planning (MSP)?

Definition (UNESCO-IOC)

  • public process of analyzing and allocating the spatial and temporal distribution of human activities in marine areas to achieve ecological, economic, and social objectives specified through a political process 

Key Features

  • Data-driven planning tool that maps marine areas and allocates zones for activities such as fishing, tourism, shipping, conservation, and energy projects
  • Balances economic growth with environmental protection
  • Promotes sustainable use of marine resources
  • Supports development of Blue Economy

Why Odisha Needs MSP

  • Rich but sensitive coast: ~574 km coastline with lagoons, mangroves, and estuaries supporting high biodiversity.
  • Rising development pressure: Industry, tourism, and ports increasing resource conflicts—needs balanced growth.
  • High climate risk: Frequent cyclones and sea-level rise demand adaptive coastal planning.

Implementation Details

  • Scientific mapping (NCCR): Study coastal waters off Odisha—benthic mapping, salinity, temperature—and identify zones for tourism, fisheries, and seaweed/seagrass cultivation.
  • Policy & governance: Data-driven policymaking to support multi-sector coastal development and stakeholders.

India-Norway Collaboration

  • India–Norway Integrated Ocean Initiative (2019): pilot phase (2021–22) in Puducherry & Lakshadweep with ~₹8–10 crore/year funding.
  • Expansion phase (2026): Odisha as first full-scale state; backed by MoES with support interest from World Bank & UNEP.

Strategic Significance

Blue Economy Alignment

  • Aligns with Centre’s emphasis on Blue Economy as one of ten core dimensions of growth (New India by 2030 vision) 
  • Supports sustainable ocean resources utilisation for economic and social development

Static-Dynamic Linkage

Static (Geography / Economy Syllabus)

  • Blue Economy: One of ten core dimensions of India’s growth (New India 2030 vision)
  • Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ): Regulated under Environment Protection Act, 1986
  • India’s coastline: 7,516 km (mainland: 5,422 km; island territories: 2,094 km)
  • Odisha coastline: ~550 km (3rd longest among Indian states after Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh)

Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026)

  • First state to implement MSP – Odisha leads in integrated ocean planning
  • Phase I (2021-22): Puducherry, Lakshadweep (UTs)
  • Phase II (2026): Odisha (first state)
  • International collaboration: India-Norway (2019 MoU)
  • Climate resilience: MSP as tool for adaptation in cyclone-prone region

Source/Reference:

https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/marine-spatial-planning-odisha-10643575/


Earth Day 2026: Our Power, Our Planet – People-Led Environmental Movements in India

Subject: Environment – Conservation Movements; Polity – Tribal Rights (PESA, FRA, Fifth Schedule).

Why in News?

  • Earth Day 2026 (April 22) theme: “Our Power, Our Planet” – emphasizing individual and community action over policy alone 
  • Down To Earth magazine pays tribute to people-led environmental movements from the iconic Chipko Movement to ongoing protests in Odisha and the Ken-Betwa region 

Chipko Movement (1970s): The Original “Tree Huggers”

  • Origin & method: 1970s Himalayas (Uttarakhand); “Chipko” = hugging trees to stop felling; 1974 Reni action led by Gaura Devi led to a 20-year ban above 1,000 m.
  • Key leaders: Sunderlal Bahuguna, Chandi Prasad Bhatt, and Gaura Devi.
  • Spread: Reached Gujarat (Chhota Udaipur) where tribal women protected Mahua trees under Harivallabh Parikh and Sanat Mehta.
  • Impact & message: Influenced forest conservation laws (1980), curbed deforestation, protected livelihoods; highlighted links between deforestation, floods, and landslides.

Ongoing People-Led Movements (2026)

  1. Ken-Betwa River Linking Project Protests (Madhya Pradesh)
  • Context: Protests (April 2026) at Dhodan Dam, part of the Ken–Betwa link in MP; ~1,000 people from 40 villages mobilised.
  • Key demands: Higher compensation, halt to alleged unauthorised demolitions, and withdrawal of “false cases.”
  • Govt stance: Says 90% compensation done under rules; prohibitory orders imposed; some protesters booked for trespass/damage.
  • Outcome: Protest called off after review assurance; joint teams to re-survey 14 villages using official records.
  1. Sijimali Bauxite Mine Protests (Odisha)
  • Project & protests: Since 2023, tribals in Sijimali hills (Rayagada, Odisha) oppose a 50-year bauxite lease to Vedanta Limited; includes a forest road (≈5 ha felling) and a 311 MT mine (9 MT/yr).
  • Police clash (Apr 7, 2026): Violence at Kantamal village—~70 injured; allegations of night raids, power cuts, lathi-charge/tear gas, detentions, and “false cases.”
  • Rights concerns: Alleged violations of PESA Act, 1996 and Forest Rights Act, 2006—no valid Gram Sabha consent; disputed 2023 meetings; pending forest rights claims.
  • Political response: Opposition parties and leaders seek probe, halt to project, and fresh Gram Sabhas under judicial oversight (Niyamgiri-like process).

Static-Dynamic Linkage

Static (Environment / Polity Syllabus)

  • Chipko Movement (1970s): First major people-led forest conservation movement in India
  • Forest Conservation Act, 1980: Enacted after Chipko; restricted diversion of forest land
  • PESA Act, 1996: Extended Panchayati Raj to Scheduled Areas; empowered Gram Sabhas
  • Forest Rights Act, 2006: Recognised individual and community forest rights
  • Fifth Schedule (Article 244): Administration of Scheduled Areas (tribal regions)
  • Niyamgiri case (2013): SC upheld Gram Sabha consent for mining; set precedent for Sijimali

Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)

  • Earth Day theme “Our Power, Our Planet” – people-led environmental action 
  • Ken-Betwa protests (April 2026) – compensation and displacement issues
  • Sijimali protests (April 2026) – police clash; 70 injured; rights violations alleged
  • Demand for Niyamgiri-style Gram Sabha in Sijimali
  • Green India Challenge: 196 million trees planted, 22,000 rainwater harvesting systems installed over 15 years; presented to Commonwealth Secretariat 

Source/Reference:

https://www.downtoearth.org.in/environment/our-power-our-planet-people-led-environmental-movements-from-chipko-to-today


(MAINS Focus)


India-South Korea: A Special Strategic Partnership in the Indo-Pacific

GS Paper II – International Relations (Bilateral Relations)
India’s Act East Policy; Economic Diplomacy; Defence Cooperation; Indo-Pacific Strategy

 

Introduction

The April 2026 state visit of South Korean President to India marked a major boost in ties after eight years. Both countries adopted a Joint Strategic Vision (2026–30) aiming to double trade to $50 billion by 2030. 

The partnership now focuses on technology, supply chains, and Indo-Pacific stability amid global disruptions.

 

Main Body

Strategic & Political Foundations

  • Shared democratic vision & strategic alignment: India and South Korea see each other as key partners—aligned through Act East Policy and New Southern Policy, with convergence in the Indo-Pacific via Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative.
  • Stronger institutional engagement: Annual leader meetings, a new 2+2 dialogue, and expanded parliamentary exchanges deepen structured cooperation.

Economic & Trade Cooperation: The $50 Billion Target

  • CEPA 2.0 for balanced trade: Upgrade of Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement to reduce trade imbalance and expand into digital trade, green economy, and supply chains.
  • New economic & security frameworks: Industrial Cooperation Committee and Economic Security Dialogue to boost sectors like semiconductors, EV batteries, and ensure resilience in critical minerals and green hydrogen.
  • Digital & financial integration: Linkage of Unified Payments Interface with Korea’s system, plus fintech cooperation for cross-border financial services.

Defence & Technology: Co-Development and Innovation

  • Defence manufacturing boost: Expansion of K9 Vajra collaboration (L&T–Hanwha) with more tech transfer, and exploration of new air defence and missile systems.
  • Innovation in defence: Launch of Korea-India Defence Accelerator (KIND-X) to link startups, incubators, and investors.
  • Digital & semiconductor cooperation: India-Korea Digital Bridge on AI and data, with investment push in semiconductors.

Shipbuilding & Maritime Partnership

Comprehensive Framework:

  • A dedicated framework for partnership in shipbuilding, shipping, and maritime logistics was adopted.
  • Greenfield Shipyard: HD Korea Shipbuilding (HD KSOE) signed a non-binding MoU for joint development of a large greenfield shipyard in Southern India.
  • Ports & Logistics: MoU on Cooperation in the Ports sector, with ROK aiding in port infrastructure development.

Energy & Resource Security

Joint Statements:

  • Separate Joint Statements on Cooperation in Sustainability and Energy Resource Security were issued.
  • Steel Dialogue: Annual India-ROK Steel Dialogue launched, focusing on green steel-making. POSCO and JSW signed an MoU for a 6 MMT Integrated Steel Plant in Odisha.
  • Critical Minerals: Cooperation to strengthen supply chains for strategic resources, critical minerals, and rare earths.

Cultural & People-to-People Ties

Ancient Connect:

  • PM Modi invoked the legend of Queen Heo Hwang-ok (Princess Suriratna of Ayodhya) who married Korean King Kim Suro in 48 AD, highlighting two millennia of shared heritage.

Modern Cultural Wave:

  • President Lee noted that “Bollywood movies and Indian cuisine have become part of everyday culture” in Korea, while K-pop and K-dramas are hugely popular in India.
  • Cultural Exchange Programme (2026-2030): Signed to promote cooperation in film, animation, and gaming.
  • Friendship Year: 2028-29 will be commemorated as the “Year of India-ROK Friendship”.

Conclusion

The April 2026 summit between India and South Korea reset ties from a buyer-seller model to co-development and strategic trust. With goals like $50B trade, Unified Payments Interface integration, and defence collaboration, the real test lies in effective implementation to deliver economic and Indo-Pacific security gains.

 

UPSC Mains Practice Question

  1. Critically assess the outcomes of the recent India–South Korea Summit 2026. How can India and South Korea address trade imbalance and realise their full strategic potential to co-develop critical technologies and defence platforms in the Indo-Pacific? (250 words, 15 marks)

 

https://www.pmindia.gov.in/en/news_updates/joint-strategic-vision-for-india-rok-special-strategic-partnership/

https://www.mea.gov.in/incoming-visit-detail.htm?41062/List+of+Outcomes+State+Visit+of+President+of+Republic+of+Korea+to+India+April+1921+2026


India's LPG Vulnerability: A Strategic Risk in Every Kitchen

GS Paper III – Economy (Energy Security) | GS Paper III – Security (Strategic Vulnerabilities)
LPG Import Dependence; Household Fuel Security; Strategic Storage; Energy Transition

 

Introduction

India faces a structural LPG mismatch: domestic output meets only ~40% of demand (~33 MT), forcing ~60% imports. Since LPG is primarily a household fuel, unlike flexible industrial use, this dependence creates persistent supply vulnerability.

 

Main Body

India’s Exposure: A Household Vulnerability Matrix

The Key Data:

  • LPG import share of total demand: 60%
  • LPG imports as % of domestic production: 150%
  • Household kitchen criticality of LPG: Very high
  • LPG cover/storage position: 15 days operational tankage cover; ~1.5 days in cavern-based deep storage (140,000 tonnes at Visakhapatnam and Mangaluru)

Comparative Vulnerability:

  • Japan: Imports 70% of LPG, but only 40% of households use LPG (electricity 55%, city gas large base). Storage: 108.3 days.
  • China: Imports 40.4% of LPG, but large share driven by petrochemical sector. Household vulnerability low to moderate.
  • South Korea: Imports ~74.5% of LPG, but household energy supported by natural gas and electricity. Storage: 15-30 day framework.

The Indian Exception:

  • India’s problem is not that it imports LPG—many countries do.
  • India’s problem is that it imports LPG for the one use that is hardest to defer and hardest to replace quickly: household cooking.

The Strait of Hormuz: No Longer a Dependable Corridor

The Vulnerability:

  • About 90% of India’s LPG imports normally transit the Strait of Hormuz.
  • The West Asia war has exposed this sharply.
  • Even if present tensions ease, the old assumption of uninterrupted normality will not return easily.
  • The risk attached to this route has now entered the strategic calculation in a lasting way.

What This Means:

  • India cannot treat the Strait of Hormuz as a routinely dependable corridor for household fuel security.
  • A corridor that was once a logistics route is now a strategic vulnerability.

Storage: Thin Reserve-Style Protection

Operational Tankage Cover:

  • About 15 days across import locations, bottling plants, refineries, and fractionators (PPAC data).
  • Shows the system is not empty—but operational cover is not strategic reserve.

Cavern-Based Deep Storage:

  • Visakhapatnam: 60,000 tonnes
  • Mangaluru: 80,000 tonnes
  • Total: 140,000 tonnes
  • Equals only about 1.5 days of national demand

The Gap:

  • For a country of India’s size and import dependence, reserve-style protection is still very thin.
  • Japan has 108.3 days of storage. India has 1.5 days of deep storage.

What India Must Do: Four Policy Priorities

First: Reserve Domestic Molecules for Kitchens

  • Stop treating all LPG molecules as one pool.
  • Direct refiners to prioritise propane and butane for cooking LPG rather than petrochemical or gasoline-blending use.
  • Domestically produced LPG should be reserved first for household fuel security.
  • Petrochemical users should increasingly arrange their own feedstock imports.
  • The government should not have to defend domestic kitchens and industrial feedstock demand from the same protected pool.

Second: Build a Deeper LPG Buffer

  • Initial goal: 2 to 3 weeks of protected cover for the household pool.
  • At current demand levels: 1.3 million tonnes for 14 days; 1.9 million tonnes for 21 days.
  • This is a large jump from current cavern capacity (0.14 million tonnes).
  • But this is the minimum scale at which India can begin to claim meaningful resilience.

Third: Sustained Campaign for Electric Cooking

  • Target urban and semi-urban India.
  • Households with reliable power, adequate wiring, and access to induction cooking should be encouraged to shift primary cooking load away from LPG.
  • A ‘Give it up 2.0’ plan should be launched.
  • The aim: reduce the number of homes for which the LPG cylinder remains the first and only kitchen fuel.
  • Piped Natural Gas (PNG) should expand where density supports it, but electricity is the broader lever.

Fourth: Diversify Import Sources and Corridors

  • Reduce concentration on the Strait of Hormuz (currently 90%).
  • Explore alternative supply routes and long-term contracts with non-Gulf suppliers.
  • Build strategic partnerships for LPG supply resilience.

Conclusion

India faces a structural LPG vulnerability: ~60% imports (mostly via Strait of Hormuz) and over 90% used in households, leaving little flexibility. With minimal storage (~1.5 days) and tight global supply, the solution lies in reserving domestic LPG for kitchens, separating petrochemical use, building a 2–3 week buffer, and promoting electric cooking.

 

UPSC Mains Practice Question

  1. Critically analyse India’s LPG vulnerability in terms of import dependence, limited storage, and high household reliance. What policy measures can reduce this strategic risk? (250 words, 15 marks)

 

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/the-strategic-vulnerability-in-indias-lpg-supply-model/article70885313.ece

 

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