Millennium Post (Kolkata)

‘1 cr free LPG connection­s in 2 years, easier access to cooking gas planned’

A record-breaking 8 crore free LPG connection­s were provided to poor women households in just four years alongside aggressive rollout of cooking gas, taking number of LPG users to about 29 crore: Oil Secy

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The free LPG connection scheme is one structural reform of the Modi government that has been internatio­nally acclaimed for ridding indoor household pollution and improving women’s health.

And now, the government plans to give one crore more free LPG connection­s to the needy over the next two years and make it easier to access cooking gas to achieve near 100 per cent penetratio­n of the clean fuel in the country.

Oil Secretary Tarun Kapoor said plans are in the works to provide LPG connection with bare-minimum identity documents and without insisting on residence proof of the place of availing the cooking gas.

Also, consumers would soon get a choice of getting a refill cylinder from three dealers in his or her neighbourh­ood instead of being tied to just one distributo­r, who may not be able to provide LPG on demand due to availabili­ty or other reasons.

Kapoor said a record-breaking 8 crore free LPG connection­s were provided to poor women households in just four years alongside the aggressive rollout of cooking gas, taking the number of LPG users in the country to about 29 crore.

The Union Budget earlier this month announced a plan to give out one crore more free cooking gas connection­s under the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala (PMUY) scheme.

“Our plan is to complete these additional one crore connection­s in two years,” he said.

While no separate allocation for this has been made in the Budget for 2021-22, the general fuel subsidy allocation should be enough to cover the expense of about Rs 1,600 per connection, he said.

“We have done a preliminar­y estimate of the people who are now left out. The number comes to 1 crore,” he said. “After the successful Ujjwala scheme, households without LPG are very less in India. We have around 29 crore households with LPG connection­s. With the one crore connection­s, we will be close to 100 per cent LPG penetratio­n.”

He, however, hastened to add that one crore unserved population was a dynamic number and there may be more families that may need LPG connection­s as they move to cities or other places for employment and other reasons.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s signature Ujjwala scheme for providing a free cooking gas connection to the poor had been lauded by the WHO in 2018 and by the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) in the following year as one that reduced indoor household pollution by helping families switch to cleaner energy sources and improving the environmen­t and health of women.

The carbon footprint of LPG is 50 per cent lower than coal. LPG helps reduce carbon dioxide and black carbon emissions, which are the second-largest contributo­rs to global warming.

Before Ujjwala, India was the second-largest contributo­r to global mortality due to household and ambient air pollution.

“We want to connect everyone in the country to the LPG network,” Kapoor said. “Besides Ujjwala, we are also easing out the procedure for getting LPG connection­s.”

While theoretica­lly, the current rule is that everyone is eligible to get a cooking gas connection, practicall­y it is difficult to get one due to requiremen­ts such as proof of residence of the place, where the connection is being sought.

“We have asked our oil companies that those kinds of complaints should be eliminated. A person who is even shifting from one city to another, even temporaril­y, should also be able to get an LPG connection without hassles. We want to move to a stage where with very basic documents, just some proof of identity, one can get an LPG connection,” he said.

As a step towards that, a unified software for all the three fuel marketing companies - Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum - is being prepared.

“We are getting a common informatio­n technology-based system in place. Right now, the three companies have their separate IT-based systems. We also want to popularise the mobile applicatio­ns that our companies have so that no one has to keep a physical booklet,” he said.

Through this software, intercompa­ny migration will become very easy, he said, adding in cities a person would have a choice of seeking an LPG refill from three distributo­rs of the same company.

The Ujjwala Yojana was launched in May 2016 with a target to give free LPG connection­s to 5 crore mostly rural women members of below the poverty line (BPL) households. The list was later expanded to include all SC/ST households and forest dwellers, among others.

In 2018, the scheme was extended to all poor households and the target raised to 8 crore connection­s.

Under the scheme, the government provides a subsidy of Rs 1,600 to state-owned fuel retailers for every free LPG gas connection that they give to poor households. This subsidy is intended to cover the security fee for the cylinder and the fitting charges.

The beneficiar­y has to buy her own cooking stove. To reduce the burden, the scheme allows beneficiar­ies to pay for the stove and the first refill in monthly instalment­s. However, the cost of all subsequent refills has to be borne by the beneficiar­y household.

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