BPCL Commissions 50-Bedded High-Altitude Hospital in Kedarnath, Strengthening Critical Care Access at 12,000 Feet in the Himalayas
Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited has inaugurated a 50-bedded high-altitude hospital at Kedarnath Dham in partnership with SVHMS, enhancing critical healthcare at 12,000 feet. The facility provides ICU care, emergency treatment, and advanced diagnostics for pilgrims and locals in extreme Himalayan conditions.
The hospital, situated at an altitude of nearly 12,000 feet, marks a major upgrade from the existing temporary 8-bed facility that has long struggled to manage the surge in medical cases during peak pilgrimage seasons. The new infrastructure is equipped to handle a wide range of emergencies including respiratory distress, cardiac complications, trauma injuries, and neurological conditions commonly reported in high-altitude environments.
Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami formally inaugurated the BPCL-supported hospital, marking its operational launch in Shri Kedarnath Dham.
Commenting on the initiative, Sanjay Khanna, Chairman and Managing Director of BPCL, who also holds additional charge as Director (Refineries), stated that the company’s Corporate Social Responsibility extends beyond infrastructure creation to delivering meaningful and lasting impact on human lives. He emphasized that improving access to quality, inclusive, and timely healthcare remains a core priority for BPCL. He further noted that the Kedarnath region, revered as one of the holiest pilgrimage destinations and located in extremely demanding terrain, reflects the company’s resolve to strengthen healthcare access where it is needed most. He added that the hospital, equipped with modern medical facilities, will play a critical role in addressing emergencies and ensuring dependable healthcare services for both pilgrims and local communities with compassion and timeliness.
The facility operates with round-the-clock services and is equipped with intensive care units, ventilators, diagnostic laboratories, and trained medical professionals specializing in high-altitude medicine. It is further supported by a referral linkage with the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Rishikesh, ensuring advanced critical care support when required. The hospital is expected to serve over 100,000 patients annually, including approximately 30,000 emergency cases, significantly improving medical response during high-risk pilgrimage periods.
Each year, hundreds of thousands of pilgrims visiting Shri Kedarnath Dham face severe health risks due to extreme weather conditions, low oxygen levels, and pre-existing medical conditions. The newly established facility aims to address these challenges by ensuring timely and structured medical intervention in a region where rapid response is often the difference between life and death.
The project has been implemented in collaboration with SVHMS, a charitable healthcare organization established in 2012. SVHMS operates 12 hospitals across Uttarakhand, including major high-altitude facilities at Shri Badri Dham, Shri Kedarnath Dham, and Gangotri Dham. The organization’s sustained healthcare efforts have contributed to a measurable reduction in morbidity and mortality among pilgrims, alongside extensive medical outreach in remote Himalayan regions.
BPCL, which operates refineries in Mumbai, Kochi, and Bina with a combined capacity of approximately 35.3 million metric tonnes per annum, continues to expand its nationwide energy and social infrastructure. The company’s marketing network includes over 25,300 fuel stations, more than 1,000 compressed natural gas stations, over 6,250 liquefied petroleum gas distributorships, 6800 electric vehicle charging-enabled fuel stations, and extensive logistics and storage infrastructure. It is also advancing toward its sustainability roadmap with the goal of becoming a Net Zero Energy Company by 2040 in Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions.
With its guiding philosophy of “Energising Lives,” BPCL continues to integrate social responsibility with its core energy operations, focusing on healthcare, education, water conservation, skill development, and community upliftment across India.
This high-altitude hospital stands as a critical intervention in one of the country’s most geographically challenging regions, reinforcing emergency preparedness and reshaping healthcare delivery for pilgrims and local populations in the Himalayas.

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