UPSC Foundation 2026 and JPSC Mentorship admissions open Daily Current Affairs
learnpro Civil Services
LearnPro Menu
Home Current Affairs All Articles
UPSC
UPSC NOTES
STATE PSC
OPTIONAL SUBJECTS
CURRENT AFFAIRS
DAILY EDITORIAL
COURSES
DOWNLOAD NOTES
PYQ Papers Mains Answer Writing Online Courses

CA Topic

Electrifying Indian Kitchens

Brief Context

Context Every West Asian escalation sends a price shock into Indian households raising the question whether India must electrify its kitchens at scale. India’s Need to Shift Towards Electric Kitchens High Import Dependence: India imports a large share of its LPG and natural gas, making cooking energy dependent on global markets and vulnerable routes like the Strait of Hormuz. Rising Fiscal Burden of Subsidies: Schemes such as Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana require huge government spending, which

Source Content

Syllabus: GS3/Economy/Sustainability/Supply Chain

Context

  • Every West Asian escalation sends a price shock into Indian households raising the question whether India must electrify its kitchens at scale.

India’s Need to Shift Towards Electric Kitchens

  • High Import Dependence: India imports a large share of its LPG and natural gas, making cooking energy dependent on global markets and vulnerable routes like the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Rising Fiscal Burden of Subsidies: Schemes such as Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana require huge government spending, which is not sustainable in the long run.
  • Affordability Issues for Households: Unsubsidised LPG is expensive, leading many households to continue using firewood and dung despite having LPG connections.
  • Support for Climate Goals: Electrification aligns with India’s decarbonisation targets by enabling the use of renewable energy sources like solar.
  • Better Energy Security & Self-Reliance: Electricity can be generated domestically (solar, wind), reducing dependence on imported fuels.

Significance of Electric Kitchens

  • Energy Efficiency Advantage: Electric cooking (induction, EPCs) is far more efficient (~85%) compared to LPG (~40%), reducing overall energy consumption.
  • Cleaner and Healthier Cooking: Eliminates indoor air pollution caused by biomass fuels, improving respiratory health, especially for women and children.
  • Declining Cost of Electricity: Study by Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis shows electric cooking is already cheaper than unsubsidised LPG in many urban areas.
  • Integration with Rooftop Solar: Government initiatives like PM Surya Ghar Yojana enable households to produce and consume their own energy.

Challenges

  • Grid Stress: Increased electricity demand during peak evening hours may strain the power grid.
  • Infrastructure Gaps: Many households still lack reliable electricity or sufficient load capacity.
  • Upfront Costs: Initial investment in induction cooktops, compatible utensils, and wiring upgrades.
  • Behavioural Barriers: In India the cooking is not one pot preparation but rather includes preparing multiple dishes simultaneously, making electric kitchen less attractive.
  • Technology Limitations: Current induction models may not fully replicate flame-based cooking.
  • Policy & Ecosystem Gaps: Lack of widespread smart meters, demand-response systems, and supportive tariffs.

Way Forward

  • Targeted Electrification: Begin with urban households to make LPG available for rural areas.
  • Financial Support: Redirect part of LPG subsidies toward one-time incentives for electric cooking appliances.
  • Grid Modernisation: Invest in smart grids, battery storage, and demand-response systems.
  • R&D Investment: Develop induction technologies suited for Indian cooking (multi-pot, high-heat cooking).
  • Integration with Solar: Promote rooftop solar along with battery systems to reduce peak load and enable energy trading.

Source: TH