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Plugging in: Why India must electrify its kitchens at scale

17 Mar 2026
2 min

Induction Cooking vs. LPG in India

India spends a significant amount on importing cooking gas, with domestic LPG connections having grown substantially. However, a large percentage of households still depend on firewood and dung for cooking. This section explores the transition to electric cooking, its implications, and the necessary infrastructure upgrades.

Current LPG Scenario

  • India spends $26.4 billion annually on cooking gas imports.
  • 332 million LPG connections exist, but 37% of households still use traditional fuels.
  • 60% of LPG and 50% of natural gas are imported.
  • The import bill for LPG has increased by 50% in six years.

Cost Comparison: Electric Cooking vs. LPG

  • Electric cooking is 37% cheaper than unsubsidised LPG and 14% cheaper than piped natural gas for a family in Delhi.
  • Induction cooktops transfer about 85% of energy efficiently compared to LPG’s 40%.
  • The heavily subsidised PMUY pricing is the only LPG pricing that undercuts electric cooking, costing the exchequer significantly.

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Induction cooktops need to accommodate Indian multi-pot cooking styles.
  • Mass adoption requires R&D on multi-pot and flame-replicating models.
  • Urban adoption of electric cooking can free LPG for rural areas with unreliable electricity.
  • Electricity demand peaks, risk of grid stress, and spot-market price hikes are concerns.

Technological Solutions

The integration of Open Automated Demand Response (OpenADR) can help manage grid loads efficiently.

  • OpenADR allows smart devices to adjust consumption automatically.
  • Tata Power's pilot in Delhi showcased a 14% peak reduction using OpenADR.

Consumer Participation and Infrastructure

  • Households can become 'prosumers' by using rooftop solar and batteries.
  • Peer-to-peer (P2P) energy trading allows direct electricity sales between consumers.
  • India is piloting P2P trading in Lucknow with promising results.
  • Upgrades are needed in household load capacity and discom infrastructure.

Policy Recommendations

  • Redirect part of the LPG subsidy to support induction cooktop adoption.
  • Expand bulk procurement for e-cooking appliances and fund R&D for suitable technology.
  • Mandate time-of-use tariffs for e-cooking and require appliance compatibility with OpenADR.

Conclusion

The transition to electric cooking is essential for economic and geopolitical reasons, reducing reliance on imported LPG and enhancing energy sovereignty. Urban areas are well-suited to initiate this shift, leveraging existing grid capabilities and solar potential.

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RELATED TERMS

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Discom infrastructure

Refers to the infrastructure of Distribution Companies responsible for supplying electricity to consumers. Upgrades to this infrastructure are deemed necessary to support a large-scale transition to electric cooking.

Peer-to-peer (P2P) energy trading

A system that allows consumers to directly buy and sell electricity from each other, often using distributed energy resources like rooftop solar. India is piloting this concept as part of modernizing the energy sector.

Prosumers

A portmanteau of 'producer' and 'consumer.' In the context of energy, it refers to individuals or entities that both produce energy (e.g., through rooftop solar) and consume it, with the potential to sell excess energy.

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