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This Article is From Apr 30, 2019

Why A Village In Rajasthan Is Still Using ‘Chulha’ Over LPG Cylinder

Why A Village In Rajasthan Is Still Using ‘Chulha’ Over LPG Cylinder
A liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinder stands outside a house under construction in the village of Mangrauli, Uttar Pradesh, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)

It has been over two years since Goti Bai, 36, got her first cylinder of liquefied petroleum gas under a three-year-old government scheme to promote clean cooking fuel.

A farmer from Khatlabor village in north Rajasthan's Pratapgarh district, Bai is one of 80 million poor Indian women to benefit from the scheme titled Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana.

On a scorching April afternoon when we arrived at her home, Goti Bai was busy with a weekly meeting of the local self-help group. How does she cook? we asked. She pointed to the chulha (earthen stove) on the floor of her one-room home. This windowless space serves as the living room, bedroom and kitchen for her family.

The steel gas stove that Goti Bai got as a part of the PMUY package sat on a high wooden beam, smothered in dust and cobwebs. She led us to her cowshed, her lavender odhni (stole) pulled firmly over her face as is the custom among the women of the region when they are in the presence of unknown men.

We were accompanied by volunteers of Prayas, a non-profit working on health, livelihood and gender in Rajasthan, as we investigated why PMUY has been unable to phase out chulhas in rural kitchens, as Factchecker reported on April 22.

Goti Bai's LPG cylinder sat behind bales of cattle fodder. “We don't have the money to buy a refill,” Got Bai explained.

The programme, started in 2016, gives women from below-poverty-line households their first gas cylinder, a regulator and a connecting tube. The government pays the security deposit for the cylinder, the cost of regulator and the installation charges--Rs 1,600 in all--as a kind of “loan” that is later deducted by the gas agencies from the LPG subsidies that beneficiaries get in their bank accounts.

After this, families have to buy their own refill cylinders that cost about Rs 800-850 each upfront. Even though an amount of Rs. 200 is deposited in their accounts after the loan amount is deducted, many beneficiaries cannot afford this price upfront, we found. Most homes in Khatlabor continue to cook on chulhas using firewood, dung and coal, breathing in noxious smoke, said Jawahar Singh, Prayas' district coordinator in Pratapgarh.

We found this true of many villages we visited in Chittorgarh and Pratapgarh districts. Families that do use LPG to cook, do so sparingly--to brew a cup of tea, for example, or on a rainy day when firewood turns damp. This is despite the fact that Rajasthan ranks third in the number of LPG refill connections as per this Dec. 2018 report from The Hindu BusinessLine.

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