Electrifying Indian Kitchens

Syllabus: GS3/Economy/Sustainability/Supply Chain

Context

  • Every West Asian escalation sends a price shock into Indian households raising the question whether India must electrify its kitchens at scale.

India’s Need to Shift Towards Electric Kitchens

  • High Import Dependence: India imports a large share of its LPG and natural gas, making cooking energy dependent on global markets and vulnerable routes like the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Rising Fiscal Burden of Subsidies: Schemes such as Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana require huge government spending, which is not sustainable in the long run.
  • Affordability Issues for Households: Unsubsidised LPG is expensive, leading many households to continue using firewood and dung despite having LPG connections.
  • Support for Climate Goals: Electrification aligns with India’s decarbonisation targets by enabling the use of renewable energy sources like solar.
  • Better Energy Security & Self-Reliance: Electricity can be generated domestically (solar, wind), reducing dependence on imported fuels.

Significance of Electric Kitchens

  • Energy Efficiency Advantage: Electric cooking (induction, EPCs) is far more efficient (~85%) compared to LPG (~40%), reducing overall energy consumption.
  • Cleaner and Healthier Cooking: Eliminates indoor air pollution caused by biomass fuels, improving respiratory health, especially for women and children.
  • Declining Cost of Electricity: Study by Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis shows electric cooking is already cheaper than unsubsidised LPG in many urban areas.
  • Integration with Rooftop Solar: Government initiatives like PM Surya Ghar Yojana enable households to produce and consume their own energy.

Challenges

  • Grid Stress: Increased electricity demand during peak evening hours may strain the power grid.
  • Infrastructure Gaps: Many households still lack reliable electricity or sufficient load capacity.
  • Upfront Costs: Initial investment in induction cooktops, compatible utensils, and wiring upgrades.
  • Behavioural Barriers: In India the cooking is not one pot preparation but rather includes preparing multiple dishes simultaneously, making electric kitchen less attractive.
  • Technology Limitations: Current induction models may not fully replicate flame-based cooking.
  • Policy & Ecosystem Gaps: Lack of widespread smart meters, demand-response systems, and supportive tariffs.

Way Forward

  • Targeted Electrification: Begin with urban households to make LPG available for rural areas.
  • Financial Support: Redirect part of LPG subsidies toward one-time incentives for electric cooking appliances.
  • Grid Modernisation: Invest in smart grids, battery storage, and demand-response systems.
  • R&D Investment: Develop induction technologies suited for Indian cooking (multi-pot, high-heat cooking).
  • Integration with Solar: Promote rooftop solar along with battery systems to reduce peak load and enable energy trading.

Source: TH

 

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