Business Standard

Credits to Airtel accounts hamper LPG subsidy flow

Beneficiar­ies say unaware that sops were paid to payments bank accounts

- SAHIL MAKKAR & SHINE JACOB write

Officials in the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas said there was a problem of delayed payment to beneficiar­ies. “About 3.72 million consumers are facing problems related to subsidy as a large number of them are unaware about their newly opened accounts with Airtel Payments Bank,” said an oil marketing company official.

Waseem Khan, a resident of Faizabad in Uttar Pradesh, is among the 3.72 million beneficiar­ies facing difficulti­es in getting domestic gas subsidy in their bank accounts. Khan claimed his family has not received any subsidy for the past few months despite having provided his Aadhaar and bank account numbers to the local gas supplier.

Officials in the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas admitted that there was a problem of delayed payments to beneficiar­ies. “About 3.72 million consumers are facing problems related to subsidy as a large number of them are unaware about their newly opened accounts with Airtel Payments Bank,” said an oil marketing company official.

The official alleged that Airtel Payments Bank opened new accounts for their mobile phone subscriber­s without their “informed consent”. These subscriber­s had visited the Airtel outlets for Aadhaar-based SIM verificati­on.

According to the current practice, cooking gas subsidy is paid into the newly opened account. “According to rules, the LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) subsidy is transferre­d to the (latest) bank account of the beneficiar­y that has been seeded with his Aadhaar,” a government official said. “But we understand that about 3.72 million consumers are getting subsidy in their Airtel bank accounts, which they don’t seem to have opened. But from our side, that money has already been disbursed.”

In the three-month period, the bank had done 9.5 million subsidy-related transactio­ns. An amount of ~167 crore was deposited as subsidy in these 3.7 million accounts, against ~68.33 crore of deposits that Airtel Payments Bank reported at the end of FY17, which was its first year of operation. This is even after the ministry of petroleum had approached the department of financial services, under the finance ministry, asking that such accounts be deseeded from subsidy disburseme­nts.

“We estimate that around ~167-crore subsidy of the past three months (September, October and November) is lying in these Airtel payment accounts,” added the oil marketing company official.

Following a complaint by the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, the Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India (UIDAI) initiated a probe against Bharti Airtel for allegedly opening payments bank accounts of its subscriber­s without consent. Bharti Airtel has been asked to explain why a financial penalty should not be imposed on it for violating Aadhaar rules. Following this, the UIDAI on Saturday temporaril­y barred Bharti Airtel and Airtel Payments Bank from conducting Aadhaar-based SIM verificati­on.

An Airtel spokespers­on told Business Standard it has responded to the UIDAI. Airtel Payments Bank was fully compliant with all guidelines and followed a stringent customer on-boarding process. “The re-verificati­on for mobile phones and the opening of Airtel Payments Bank accounts are completely separate transactio­ns and not linked. All Airtel Payments Bank accounts are opened only after explicit consent from customers. A separate consent for direct benefits transfer (DBT) is taken from all customers,” the company spokespers­on said.

The company also clarified the customers were duly notified about the subsidy credit via SMS and an automated call (available in 12 languages), saying: “The govt. subsidy of ~X has been credited to your Airtel Payments Bank Account”. The customers were also informed when any interest amount was credited. “The balance in Airtel Payments Bank savings accounts can be withdrawn by customers at any Airtel Store or transferre­d to any bank account. There are no charges for DBT withdrawal and neither are there any charges for opening, maintainin­g or closing of accounts,” the spokespers­on said.

The Union government had re-launched its ambitious direct benefit transfer in LPG (DBTL) scheme PAHAL (Pratyaksh Hanstantri­t Labh) in 54 districts on November 15, 2014. It was rolled out in 622 districts on January 1, 2015. The objective of the scheme was to prevent subsidy diversion and to help genuine customers using LPG for domestic cooking get subsidy. It was also alleged that the petroleum and gas companies were not providing benefits to genuine customers.

Government officials said before the launch of the scheme, there were around 195 million domestic gas consumers in the country. Around 35 million gas connection­s were found to be fake after consumers linked their Aadhaar with their respective LPG customer numbers. Another 10 million was said to have opted out of the subsidy scheme under the government’s Give Up campaign.

As of November, India has around 251.1 million domestic LPG consumers. Of this, 121.2 million are with Indian Oil Corporatio­n, 64 million with Bharat Petroleum Corporatio­n, and 65.9 million with Hindustan Petroleum Corporatio­n. The Narendra Modi government has been successful in adding another 31.6 million below-poverty-line customers through its flagship social sector scheme, Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana.

 ??  ?? Subsidy that goes to consumers’ account comes to the tune of ~246.31 per cylinder as of November in the Delhi market
Subsidy that goes to consumers’ account comes to the tune of ~246.31 per cylinder as of November in the Delhi market

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