India’s kitchens have long relied on liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and traditional biomass fuels for daily cooking. As the country grapples with rising energy costs, health concerns from indoor pollution, and the fiscal burden of fuel subsidies, induction stoves emerge as a promising modern alternative. These electric cooktops use electromagnetic fields to heat cookware directly, offering efficiency, safety, and environmental benefits. This essay compares induction stoves with conventional gas-based products, examines their potential to ease pressure on gas prices and subsidies, evaluates their overall cost-effectiveness, and estimates the financial outlay required to distribute them nationwide to households without access. It then assesses the feasibility of such a policy in light of the government’s existing expenditure on schemes like the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN). A nationwide shift to induction cooking could represent a transformative step toward energy security and public health, provided implementation addresses practical challenges.
Induction stoves differ markedly from LPG stoves in
performance and user experience. An induction cooktop converts electrical
energy into heat with an efficiency of 85-90 percent, compared to only 35-45
percent for gas burners, where much heat is lost to the surrounding air. This
means faster cooking times—water boils in roughly half the duration—and precise
temperature control, reducing the risk of overcooking or burning food. Safety
is another major advantage: induction generates no open flame, eliminating the
hazards of gas leaks, carbon monoxide poisoning, or accidental fires that
plague LPG users, especially in poorly ventilated rural homes. From a health
perspective, induction produces zero direct emissions at the point of use,
sparing families—particularly women and children—from the smoke and particulate
matter associated with LPG incomplete combustion or biomass chulhas.
Environmentally, shifting away from LPG reduces reliance on fossil fuels,
cutting household carbon footprints when powered by an increasingly
renewable-heavy grid.In contrast, LPG stoves remain popular for their
portability and familiarity. Cylinders can be used anywhere with minimal
infrastructure, and decades of government promotion through schemes like
Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala
Yojana have achieved near-universal connections.
However, LPG’s drawbacks are significant: fluctuating international prices affect
domestic supply, and subsidies create a heavy fiscal load. Households often
stack fuels—using LPG for quick tasks and biomass for slow cooking—leading to
continued pollution. Induction, while requiring compatible ferrous cookware and
a stable electricity connection, overcomes these limitations in urban and
semi-urban settings where power access is improving rapidly. For millions still
dependent on biomass, induction offers a cleaner leap forward without the
recurring cost and logistics of cylinder refills.
One of the strongest arguments for induction stoves
lies in their ability to moderate gas prices and subsidy burdens. India imports
over half its LPG requirements, exposing the economy to global price
volatility. High domestic demand keeps the subsidy bill elevated; the
government periodically absorbs losses to shield consumers from market rates.
Widespread adoption of induction would reduce LPG consumption substantially.
Even a partial shift—say, 30-40 percent of cooking energy moving to electricity—could
lower import volumes, ease supply-chain pressures, and potentially soften
international price signals through reduced demand. Domestically, this
translates into lower fiscal outlays on subsidies, freeing resources for other
priorities. Lower LPG uptake would also decrease the frequency of cylinder
deliveries, reducing logistical costs and black-market diversions. In effect,
induction does not just substitute one fuel for another; it alleviates systemic
pressure on the gas economy, indirectly benefiting even those who continue
using LPG by stabilising prices and supply.
Cost-effectiveness further strengthens the case for
induction. The upfront purchase price of a basic induction stove ranges between
₹2,000 and ₹4,000, with many reliable models available around ₹2,500-3,000.
Operating costs compare favourably to LPG. A typical 14.2 kg LPG cylinder,
after subsidy, costs households ₹550-900 depending on the region, delivering
roughly 300-350 usable cooking units. The same output from induction requires
about 70-80 kilowatt-hours of electricity. At average domestic tariffs of ₹5-8
per unit (often lower under subsidies or for the first 100-200 units), the
monthly expense works out to ₹350-640—frequently cheaper than unsubsidised or
market-rate LPG, especially for heavy users. Over time, the absence of cylinder
booking, delivery delays, and refill charges adds to savings. Maintenance is
minimal; induction tops have no burners to clean and last 5-10 years with
proper care. When paired with solar rooftop installations or time-of-use
tariffs, running costs can drop even lower, making induction a financially
prudent long-term choice for both middle-class and lower-income families.
Estimating the outlay to equip all households without
induction stoves reveals a substantial but manageable investment when viewed
against existing fiscal commitments. India has approximately 300 million
households. LPG connections exceed 330 million, yet primary reliance on gas
stands at around 60 percent, with significant stacking and biomass use
persisting in rural areas. Induction penetration remains strikingly low—only
about 5 percent of households report meaningful electric cooking capability.
Thus, roughly 285 million households currently lack induction stoves.
Distributing a basic unit at an average subsidised cost of ₹3,000 per household
(covering procurement, basic installation support, and awareness) would require
a one-time outlay of approximately ₹8.55 lakh crore. Even targeting a more
realistic subset—say, 200 million households still heavily dependent on biomass
or subsidised LPG for primary cooking—the figure drops to around ₹6 lakh crore.
To put this in perspective, the annual allocation for
PM-KISAN, which provides ₹6,000 yearly to over 11 crore farmer families, stands
at roughly ₹63,500 crore. The full induction distribution cost equates to about
13-14 years of PM-KISAN spending if incurred at once, or roughly 9-10 years if
phased over five years at ₹1.2-1.7 lakh crore annually. This is not an
apples-to-apples comparison, as PM-KISAN is a recurring revenue transfer while
induction represents capital investment yielding decades of returns through
subsidy savings, health improvements, and productivity gains. Long-term fiscal
modelling suggests that reduced LPG subsidies—currently running into tens of
thousands of crores yearly—could recover a significant portion of the initial
outlay within 8-12 years. Additional savings from lower health expenditure on
respiratory ailments and environmental remediation would further tilt the
balance in favour of induction.
The feasibility of a nationwide induction distribution
policy hinges on several practical considerations, yet the outlook is
encouraging. Electricity access has improved dramatically under schemes like
Saubhagya, with over 99 percent of households electrified, though reliable 24x7
supply remains patchy in remote areas. Grid capacity upgrades, accelerated
renewable integration, and smart metering can address peak-load concerns from
simultaneous cooking hours. Complementary measures—such as targeted subsidies
for low-income families, free cookware kits, and community-level training—would
boost adoption. Behavioural change is essential; millions are accustomed to gas
flames, but the convenience of induction, demonstrated through pilot projects
and recent market surges during gas-supply anxieties, shows rapid uptake when
awareness and affordability align. Challenges like initial capital for
distribution logistics, ensuring quality standards to avoid substandard
products, and supporting micro-enterprises for local manufacturing can be met
through public-private partnerships. Politically, framing the policy as an
extension of clean-energy and women’s empowerment initiatives would garner
broad support, similar to the success of Ujjwala.
In conclusion, induction stoves offer a superior cooking tool compared to traditional gas products, delivering unmatched efficiency, safety, and cleanliness while promising meaningful relief on gas prices and subsidy burdens. Their cost-effectiveness is evident in both upfront affordability and lower lifetime expenses, making them an economically sound choice for Indian households. The estimated outlay to equip the vast majority without induction—around ₹6-8.5 lakh crore—appears large in isolation but pales when benchmarked against recurring schemes like PM-KISAN and the long-term fiscal and health dividends it would unlock. A well-designed, phased policy is not only feasible but imperative for India’s energy transition. By investing in induction today, the nation can secure cleaner air for its families, reduce dependence on imported fuels, and build a more resilient and sustainable cooking ecosystem for generations to come. The time to ignite this quiet revolution in Indian kitchens is now.