Iran sanctions are limiting global LPG availability, creating input cost pressures across petrochemicals, plastics, chemicals, and fertilizers sectors. India’s approximately 50% import dependency on LPG (historically sourced from Iran) creates vulnerability. LPG prices remain elevated at $4.50-5.50/MMBtu, with cascading effects across dependent industries.
Supply Constraints
LPG Price Levels
LPG prices remain elevated at $4.50-5.50 per million BTU (MMBtu), driven by supply constraints from Iran sanctions and broader geopolitical factors.
Import Dependency
India imports approximately 50% of its LPG requirements. Historically, Iran was a significant supplier, and sanctions have disrupted these supply relationships.
Cascading Cost Impacts
Input cost pressures affect multiple sectors:
– Plastics: Cost increases of 8-15%
– Chemicals: Significant price volatility
– Fertilizers: LNG price linkages drive cost increases
– Paints and coatings: Solvent and resin cost pressures
Mitigation Strategies
Supply diversification across non-sanctioned suppliers reduces dependency on any single source. Hedging strategies protect against price volatility. Government support programs may stabilize critical sectors. Input substitution explores alternative feedstocks and materials.
The LPG supply situation requires active supply chain management and cost control strategies across affected industries to maintain profitability amid elevated input costs.
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