SUMMARY
The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas issued a directive that was simultaneously a relief and a warning for India's industrial sector. The government announced that commercial LPG supply to a wide range of industries would be capped at 70% of their pre-March 2026 consumption levels, subject to an overall daily ceiling of 0.2 thousand metric tonnes across all eligible sectors.
The sectors covered include pharma, food processing, polymers, agriculture, packaging, paints, steel, ceramics, glass, aerosols, foundry, forging, heavy water, uranium, and seed sectors. It's a long list. And the 70% cap, while framed as a restoration of supply (remember, some industries had received even less during the peak of the Hormuz disruption), still means these sectors are operating below full capacity.
Let's walk through the likely impact, sector by sector.
For most pharmaceutical manufacturers, LPG is used in heating, sterilisation, and some synthesis processes. The good news for pharma is that the government has explicitly prioritised it, and for units where LPG cannot be substituted by natural gas, the PNG registration requirement is waived. The industry body CII welcomed the decision, calling it a 'balanced approach that supports business continuity.'
Impact on stocks: Pharma companies that are domestically manufacturing-heavy should see limited disruption. API manufacturers with energy-intensive processes may face some margin pressure. Watch for commentary from companies in their Q4 earnings calls about energy cost escalation.
This is probably the most emotionally charged sector in the list. Mumbai dabbawalas, restaurants, bakeries, and packaged food manufacturers all depend heavily on LPG. Some Mumbai hotels and restaurants had already shut down partially or fully in early March due to the shortage. The 70% allocation is better than zero, but a 30% supply shortfall in food manufacturing isn't trivial.
For listed companies like Britannia, Nestlé India, or Varun Beverages, LPG is an input cost, and higher spot procurement (when available) or alternatives like PNG or biomass will show up in margins. Analysts covering FMCG and food companies should look carefully at energy cost lines in Q4 results.
Polymers and packaging are closely linked. LPG serves both as feedstock in some polymer processes and as a process heat source in packaging material manufacturing. The industry is already under pressure from the broader supply chain disruptions, and the 70% allocation, capped sectorally, means internal rationing and prioritization decisions.
For packaging-intensive sectors like consumer goods and FMCG, cost escalation here will have a second-order effect, even if their own LPG consumption is managed, the packaging materials they source could get more expensive. This is a subtle but real pass-through risk.
LPG use in agriculture spans cold storage facilities, pump operations, and post-harvest processing. The 70% allocation here is particularly important given India's food security context. However, the government's inclusion of agriculture in the priority list, and the waiver for units where PNG isn't a substitute suggest this sector will be relatively protected within the overall cap.
These two sectors are arguably the hardest hit. Gujarat's ceramics industry had already reportedly shut down during the peak shortage. These are high-temperature kiln processes where LPG is extremely difficult to substitute quickly with natural gas (it requires significant capital investment and infrastructure change). A 70% cap for ceramics and glass means meaningful production curtailment, and potentially, inventory shortfalls that push up product prices.
Investors in tiles companies (Kajaria, Asian Granito) and glass manufacturers should model scenarios where energy costs stay elevated and production volumes remain constrained through H1 FY27.
Notably, the government has built a transition mechanism into this directive. To avail bulk LPG under this allocation, industrial units must register with oil marketing companies and apply for PNG connections through CGD entities. Only units where LPG is truly non-substitutable are exempted from this requirement.
This is clever policy design. The crisis is being used as a forcing function to accelerate PNG adoption in industry, exactly what the government has been trying to do for years with limited success. States that implement PNG reform milestones get an extra 10% LPG allocation as a reward.
The industrial LPG cap creates a bifurcated set of winners and losers. Industries closer to the PNG grid, and those that can switch quickly, will manage better. Those with high-temperature processes that can't easily substitute (ceramics, glass, some chemicals) face the toughest road. For equity investors, this is a situation where supply chain resilience and energy diversification are becoming material factors in company valuation, worth asking management about directly in earnings calls.

Eternal, Swiggy Share Price Drop Over 5% as LPG Shortage Threatens Food Delivery Business
2 min Read Mar 12, 2026
IRCTC LPG Shortage: Stove Kraft, TTK Prestige Shares Jump on Induction Demand
2 min Read Mar 12, 2026
Aegis Logistics: A potential beneficiary of India’s energy transition?
6 min Read Dec 8, 2021
Confidence Petroleum: Ready to fire on all cylinders…
4 min Read Jan 18, 2019
Gas Stocks Rally Up to 15%: What Drove the Surge and Is It Sustainable?
3 min Read Apr 10, 2026
Top Gainers & Losers Today: NIACL, Blue Jet Rally; Coforge, Sun Pharma Slip
3 min Read Apr 10, 2026
PNG Expansion Push: Government Asks IGL to Triple Connections – What This Means for Investors
3 min Read Apr 10, 2026
IGL & Gujarat Gas Q4 FY26 Earnings Preview: LNG Price Surge, Margin Pressure in Focus
3 min Read Apr 10, 2026
India Hikes Natural Gas Price for April; ONGC, Oil India Stocks in Focus
3 min Read Apr 10, 2026