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New LPG rules add fresh flame to blackmarket

The consumer is confused after the one-cylinder-one-kitchen rule. But, blackmarketeers are finding out new ways to keep their business on. Is ministry watching?

Updated on: Nov 01, 2012 12:05 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Lucknow
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One-kitchen-one-connection-plus-six-subsidised-cylinder rule has only helped black market mushroom to the consumer’s chagrin.

HT Image
HT Image

Sample this! A cylinder, which was available for Rs. 600-700 range in the black market before the announcement of new system, is now available at not less than Rs. 900-1,300 in the city. And people are buying it as there is no system to check blackmarketeers.

“I purchased a cylinder at Rs. 1,250 recently. Before this new system, I used to get it within Rs. 500,” Ashutosh Rastogi, an LU research scholar who lives at a rented accommodation in Aliganj said.

Clearly, those who buy cylinders from black market are facing a tough time to keep their kitchen fires burning with the spurt in prices. Not only this, even the registered customers are being harassed by the agencies in the garb of the ‘new system’ being implemented. The agencies are shamelessly selling the subsidised cylinders at prices more than fixed. And they don’t even mind furnishing a receipt for it.

“I got a cylinder from a gas agency at Rs. 513. He even gave a receipt,” Rajesh Verma, a resident of Vivek Khand, Gomti Nagar who purchased it from Captain Manoj Pandey gas agency said. He later came to know that the actual price of subsidised cylinders in Lucknow is Rs. 417.

“We are continuing raids to check the black marketing and other illegal practices in the city. We have escalated the drives especially after the new system was announced,” Sanjay Kumar Singh Yadav additional district magistrate (civil-supplies) said.

Besides, a large number of food stalls and factories are freely using the cylinders meant for domestic use. Such cylinders are openly purchased from the black market as authorities have failed to check the illegal practice. Many consumers also complained that the agencies forced them to go for fresh connections, instead of a transfer.

After the cap was implemented, a customer can get only six subsidised domestic LPG cylinders per financial year. Also a ban on multiple connections is also being implemented. It means that one kitchen of a family can have only one gas connection, irrespective of the company.

“We are making efforts to streamline the entire LPG distribution. The idea is to ensure that genuine consumers are not denied the fuel,” DP Singh, President (UP Chapter) of All India LPG Distributors’ Federation said. This will help checking the blackmarketing to a great extent, he said adding.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Gulam Jeelani

Gulam Jeelani writes on politics, national affairs and socio-economic issues for Hindustan Times. A journalist for seven years, he worked in Lucknow and Srinagar, before moving to New Delhi.

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