MP LPG Crisis: Bhopal Residents Wait 5–7 Days for Gas Cylinder as Iran War Hits Home
Digital Desk
Bhopal and Madhya Pradesh face a severe LPG cylinder shortage with 5–7 day waits for domestic gas. Here's what's causing the crisis and what the government is doing.
Bhopal's Gas Crisis: A War in West Asia, a Queue in Your Neighbourhood
If you live in Bhopal and booked a gas cylinder this week, you already know the answer — it's not coming anytime soon. Across Madhya Pradesh, domestic LPG cylinder wait times have stretched to 5 to 7 days, with long queues snaking outside gas agencies as online booking systems buckle under demand. The cause? A war that started thousands of kilometres away — in the Strait of Hormuz — is now showing up at your kitchen stove.
The Iran-US-Israel conflict that erupted on February 28, 2026, has choked one of the world's most critical energy corridors, and India — which imports nearly 62% of its LPG — is feeling the full weight of it.
What's Happening on the Ground in Bhopal
Serpentine queues have been spotted outside LPG distribution agencies in Bhopal, with locals reporting that online booking has stopped working, forcing residents to visit agencies in person. NBC News
The shortage of commercial LPG cylinders in Bhopal is hitting hotels and restaurants hard, prompting many operators to switch to induction cooking, with some establishments forced to temporarily shut down. Windward One restaurant owner told reporters that his chain of 27 outlets across Madhya Pradesh has already moved 60% of kitchen operations to induction-based cooking to survive.
For ordinary households, the frustration is real and immediate. A cylinder that used to arrive in 48 hours now takes nearly a week — and that's if you're lucky.
MP Government Scrambles to Respond
The state government has moved quickly to get ahead of the panic. Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav convened an emergency review meeting and formed a three-member ministerial committee — comprising Deputy CM Jagdish Devda, Food Minister Govind Singh Rajput, and MSME Minister Chaitanya Kashyap — specifically to monitor petroleum product availability across the state. Zee News
On the national front, the Centre has not been sitting still either. The government invoked the Essential Commodities Act (1955), treating natural gas supply as a priority allocation, and ordered refineries to ramp up LPG production and redirect additional output for domestic household use. Zee News
Government sources confirmed that India has increased its LPG imports from non-Strait of Hormuz routes to 70%, up from 55% previously, and that all refineries are currently operating at full capacity. Bloomberg
Why This Crisis Hit So Fast
India's vulnerability here is structural. India consumes about 31.3 million tonnes of LPG annually and imports roughly 62% of that requirement, much of it passing through the Strait of Hormuz. Wionews When that route came under fire — literally — the supply chain snapped within days.
Restaurant owners across the country say commercial LPG supplies have largely stopped since Sunday, while domestic cylinders face delivery delays of two to eight days after booking. Military.com
The black market has moved in to fill the gap. A domestic cylinder costing ₹910 is reportedly being sold for as much as ₹2,000 in some areas, with customers forced to pay up because cylinders are simply unavailable at agencies even after a 10-day wait. Bloomberg
What Should You Do Right Now?
Here's practical advice for Bhopal residents navigating the LPG cylinder shortage:
- Book immediately — even if delivery is delayed, getting in the queue now reduces your wait time
- Avoid panic-buying — the government has extended the inter-booking period to 25 days; stocking extra cylinders is now both harder and illegal under ESMA
- Consider induction cooking as a short-term alternative for basic meals
- Report black-market pricing to your district consumer helpline or on the national consumer portal
The Bottom Line
The LPG cylinder shortage in Bhopal and across Madhya Pradesh is not a distribution failure — it is a geopolitical crisis that has travelled from the Persian Gulf straight into Indian kitchens. As of March 11, 2026, domestic 14.2 kg cylinder prices have jumped ₹60 overnight, and commercial cylinders have risen by ₹115. The Washington Post
The government says it has 12 to 16 weeks of stock. Residents waiting in queues outside agencies in 40-degree heat are entitled to ask: then why are we standing here?
The honest answer is that India's energy supply chain — long dependent on Gulf imports — was never built for a war. And now everyone, from a five-star hotel chef in Mumbai to a homemaker in Bhopal, is paying the price.
