MP Gas Agency Staff Selling Cylinders for ₹4,000 in Black Market — ESMA Action Begins, FIRs Filed
Digital Desk
MP gas agency owners and employees caught selling LPG cylinders for up to ₹4,000 in the black market amid India's LPG crisis. ESMA invoked, FIRs registered. Full report.
₹918 to ₹4,000: How MP's Own Gas Agencies Became Its Biggest Black Market
The Iran-US war choked India's LPG supply. The government invoked the Essential Commodities Act. Refineries were ordered to run at full capacity. And then, quietly, in neighbourhoods across Madhya Pradesh, gas agency owners and their own employees started pocketing the crisis — selling cylinders meant for ordinary households at prices four times the official rate.
A domestic LPG cylinder that costs ₹918.50 in Bhopal as of March 11, 2026. The same cylinder, sourced through a gas agency's back door, is reportedly being sold across MP for anywhere between ₹2,000 and ₹4,000 depending on desperation and location. The profiteering is not being carried out by shadowy middlemen alone — it is happening inside the very agencies entrusted to distribute subsidised cylinders to the public.
Inside the Racket: How It Works
The mechanics of the scam are brazen in their simplicity. Cylinders costing ₹910 are being sold in the black market for ₹2,000, with customers forced to pay up because cylinders are simply unavailable at agencies even after waiting ten days through official channels. Windward
In MP specifically, the Bhaskar report reveals that gas agency owners and their employees — the very people responsible for distributing cylinders fairly — are diverting stock before it reaches legitimate customers and selling it at inflated rates. Gas agency staff confirmed they are getting desperate calls from buyers and that panic has gripped smaller establishments who are now going to the black market because no commercial cylinders are available through official booking channels. Zee News
The 25-day rule introduced by the government to prevent hoarding has paradoxically fuelled the black market. The policy change requiring customers to book their next cylinder only after 25 days from the previous delivery has made things worse, as dealers have kept large numbers of cylinders in stock and are selling them secretly at higher rates instead of supplying through proper booking. Wikipedia
The Numbers That Tell the Full Story
The price data from Madhya Pradesh right now is stark:
As of March 11, 2026, the official domestic LPG price in Bhopal stands at ₹918.50 for a 14.2 kg cylinder — up ₹60 from last month's ₹858.50. The commercial 19 kg cylinder now costs ₹1,889 in Bhopal, a jump of ₹144 from February's ₹1,745. NPR
Yet on the street, those official prices are a fantasy for anyone who cannot wait. Commercial cylinders are being sold for as high as ₹4,500 in some markets, and buyers are paying because there is no other choice — booking has effectively stopped for commercial cylinders in many districts. Zee News
For a mid-sized restaurant or hotel in Bhopal using 50 cylinders a month, the difference between official and black market pricing translates to an additional outlay of over ₹1 lakh per month — a figure that is forcing mass closures across the hospitality sector.
Government Strikes Back: ESMA, FIRs and Raids
The state and central governments have not been silent. The Essential Commodities Act (ESMA) — a powerful law that makes hoarding and black marketing of essential goods a criminal offence — has been formally invoked nationally. In Madhya Pradesh, district administrations have launched targeted crackdowns.
The government has confirmed that LPG production has been increased by 10%, imports from non-Strait of Hormuz routes have been raised to 70% from 55%, and all refineries are currently operating at full capacity. Windward On the enforcement side, FIRs are being registered against agency owners and employees caught diverting stock, with raids being conducted across MP's urban centres.
The punishment under ESMA is severe — imprisonment of up to seven years and heavy fines. Whether that deterrent is working on the ground is another question entirely, given how widespread the black market has become in just two weeks.
Who Is Getting Hurt the Most
The human cost of this profiteering is not abstract. It lands hardest on those who can least afford it.
The crisis is hitting households directly — a ₹60 hike in domestic cylinder prices adds 7% to monthly fuel bills, and families refilling twice monthly are paying ₹120 more. Annualised, that is ₹1,440 drained from grocery budgets per household. Al Jazeera
But for families forced into the black market — who cannot access cylinders through official channels — the real monthly bill is not ₹918. It is ₹2,000 or more. That is money taken directly out of food budgets, school fees, and medical expenses. Outside gas agencies, long queues have formed with consumers alleging that online and phone bookings are not working, and that agency staff are uncooperative — sending many desperate customers towards black market suppliers. NBC News
What You Can Do Right Now
If you are a resident of Bhopal or anywhere in MP facing black market pressure on LPG cylinders, here is what you should know:
- Do not pay black market prices — report the agency or supplier immediately to your district's food and civil supplies office or on the national consumer helpline 1800-11-4000
- File a complaint online at consumerhelpline.gov.in — ESMA complaints are being fast-tracked
- Document everything — photograph the agency name, the seller, and any payment receipt if you are forced to buy at inflated prices
- Use induction cooking as a short-term bridge while official supply stabilises
- Check your booking status on the official app (Indane/HP Gas/Bharat Gas) before visiting agencies in person
The Bottom Line
The Iran-US war created India's LPG supply crisis. But the black market profiteering happening inside MP's gas agencies is a homegrown crisis — one built on greed, poor enforcement, and the exploitation of ordinary people at their most vulnerable.
Prime Minister Modi has publicly said the common man should not be impacted because of the US-Israel-Iran war. Windward That is a worthy commitment. But when a gas agency employee in Bhopal is selling your subsidised ₹918 cylinder for ₹4,000 out of the back door, the war is the least of your problems.
The government has the law, the enforcement machinery, and the public mandate to act hard and fast. The question is whether the crackdown moves faster than the profiteers.
