Energy Anxiety: Panic Booking Cripples LPG Supply Chain as West Asia Conflict Rattles Consumers
A wave of panic booking triggered by the West Asia conflict has crippled LPG distribution networks in West Bengal. Centralized servers crashed under millions of daily refill requests, leading the government to impose a 25-day gap between bookings. As supply drops by 20%, reports of delivery van hijackings and long queues highlight a growing energy security crisis.
The scale of the disruption is unprecedented. In the "Calcutta area" alone, which serves nearly 50 lakh Indane customers, booking requests skyrocketed from a standard 1 lakh per day to nearly 2 lakh within a 48-hour window. Industry sources indicate that while the state typically supplies 5 lakh cylinders daily, applications have surged to 10 lakh. This overwhelming demand forced an Indian Oil official to admit that no centralized system could withstand such a barrage, citing a single extreme instance where one customer placed over 1,000 calls in a single day. In response to the bottleneck, the Central Government has moved to stabilize inventory by mandating a 25-day mandatory gap between refill bookings for domestic users, while simultaneously pivoting commercial supplies toward essential services such as hospitals and schools.
The crisis has also taken a volatile turn on the streets of Kolkata and its suburbs. Reports have emerged of delivery personnel being physically assaulted and vans being intercepted by individuals desperate to secure cylinders at any cost. In some cases, restaurant employees facing closure due to commercial curbs allegedly attempted to bribe or forcefully snatch supplies from delivery teams in neighborhoods like Karaya, Dum Dum, and Madhyamgram. This breakdown in public order has led to a 20% dip in effective supply, as some delivery staff are now reluctant to venture out, fearing for their safety amid the prevailing atmosphere of desperation.
Politically, the situation has sparked a sharp exchange between state and central leadership. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has criticized the Centre’s lack of foresight, arguing that consumers should have been granted a grace period before the sudden imposition of the 25-day booking curb. While distributors like the Indane LPG Distributors’ Association maintain that current stockpiles are sufficient to prevent any household from going hungry, the disconnect between official assurances and the reality of crashed apps and silent phone lines continues to fuel the panic. This episode serves as a stark reminder of the fragile nature of energy logistics during geopolitical instability, highlighting how quickly perceived scarcity can evolve into a full-scale public order and administrative challenge.

Comment List