Cap on subsidised cylinders raised to 12 per year
In a Cabinet meeting on Thursday, the Congress-led UPA government at the Centre decided to suspend its ambitious project of transferring subsidy on LPG cylinders directly into the accounts of consumers.
To avail the subsidy, all consumers were required to get their Aadhaar
or unique identification number linked to their LPG consumer number and
bank accounts. Besides, the Centre has also decided to raise the cap on
subsidised cylinders from nine to 12 per year.
Speaking to mediapersons after the meeting, oil minister Veerappa
Moily said the Cabinet has decided to set up a committee to review
implementation of direct benefit transfer for LPG (DBTL). Based on the
committee report, the government will improve or rework the scheme and
will then implement it. “All schemes are meant for people and we don't
want even a single consumer to suffer”, he said.
The oil minister who had been firm on his commitment to implement Aadhaar-based LPG subsidy transfer despite the Supreme Court saying it is optional
was seen to be taking a U-turn today. He said that with the increase of
cylinder cap to 12, the government is going to incur an additional Rs
5,000 crore annually.
Moily said, “the consumer, who has exhausted his or her quota of nine
cylinders, would get two more subsidised cylinders by March 31. From
new fiscal starting April 1, consumers will get one subsidised cylinder
per month. The whole system will work as it was before introduction of
DBTL.
The decision has been taken following interventions by UPA
vice-president Rahul Gandhi and complaints by the senior party leaders
that the scheme launched to benefit over 150 million customers would
affect the party’s prospects in the coming general elections.
As per media reports, Moily was initially reluctant on raising the
cap. He argued that average LPG consumption per household was seven.
However, his argument was not heard; during the All India Congress
Committee (AICC) session earlier this month it was decided that reducing
subsidized LPG cylinder entitlement per household would have a negative
impact on the party.
DBTL was launched by the UPA government on June 1 last year in 18 districts across the country.
The government had claimed it to be a success with more than 1 million
direct cash transfers to consumers’ bank accounts. It had said that sum
of Rs 41 Crore has been transferred to the accounts of LPG consumers in
these districts and that the scheme is going to be a game changer.
Under DBTL all Aadhaar linked domestic LPG consumers would get an
advance in their bank account as soon as they book their first
subsidised cylinder, before delivery. On the delivery of the first
subsidised cylinder, the next subsidy again gets transferred in their
bank account, which is available for the purchase of next subsidized
cylinder at market rate.
The Union ministries of petroleum and natural gas (MoPNG), finance,
and the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) had taken
several initiatives to make the processes simpler and to expand the
reach of DBTL to all LPG consumers. MoPNG along with oil marketing
companies and banks have launched multi-pronged efforts to educate
consumers to link their Aadhaar numbers to LPG consumer number and bank
accounts through advertisements, SMS and emails.