India should develop multiple supply chains: Congress MP on LPG shortage
New Delhi [India], March 10 (ANI): As the West Asia conflict disrupted Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) and other natural gas supply across the country, Congress MP Karti Chidambaram on Tuesday stressed on the need for India to develop multiple supply chains so as to not be so adversely affected by the "natural fallout" of the crisis in the region.
"It is a natural fallout of the crisis in the Middle East. It is the unprovoked attack by the US on Iran which has provoked this. We should also develop other supply chains. This is not something one could have foreseen. Going forward, we must develop multiple supply chains so that we are not dependent on one geographical area," the Congress MP told ANI outside Parliament.
"Who can predict what Trump can do? There are no checks and balances in the US, and no counterbalance in the world. It is a very unpredictable situation," Chidambaram said.
"We should have foreseen that this problem will arise when a war is happening... Hoteliers of Chennai, Bengaluru and Pune have openly said that they do not have LPG, and they need to shut down their hotels. This is the case with the rest of the country, we are worried instead of having a plan," she told ANI.
"This is a very serious problem which is happening due to the conflict in Iran...There is a shortage of availability, and also the prices are being hiked," he told reporters.
The Union Government on Tuesday invoked the Essential Commodities Act (EC Act) to ensure uninterrupted supply of domestic cooking gas, directing refineries and petrochemical units to maximise production of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and divert key hydrocarbon streams to the LPG pool.
The order further states that supply of natural gas to the fertilizer plants shall ensure seventy per cent. of their past six-month average gas consumption, subject to operational availability. It has also asked gas marketing entities to ensure that gas supply to tea industries, manufacturing and other industrial consumers supplied through the national gas grid is maintained at eighty per cent. of their past six-month average gas consumption subject to operational availability.
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