Context:
India’s core sector growth declined to a three-month low in February 2026, driven by sustained contraction in domestic crude oil and natural gas production, raising concerns over economic stability and growth prospects.
Key Highlights:
- Core Sector Performance
- The Index of Eight Core Industries (ICI) recorded growth at half the rate of January 2026.
- Indicates weakening momentum in key infrastructure sectors.
- Oil & Natural Gas Sector Trends
- Crude oil production contracted for 6 consecutive months and in 20 of the last 24 months.
- Natural gas production has declined for 20 straight months.
- Macroeconomic Indicators
- Decline observed in GDP components:
- Private Consumption
- Capital Formation
- Exports & Imports
- India’s GDP estimated to be smaller than previously projected.
- Global Factors
- Oil prices exceeding $100/barrel due to global uncertainty and supply constraints.
- Growth projections revised downward to around 6.5% by economists and rating agencies.
- Structural Concerns
- Rising share of ‘change in stocks’ indicates unsold inventory accumulation, signaling weak demand.
- Risk of future production cuts aligning with subdued consumption.
- Policy & Strategic Aspects
- Domestic production contraction partly linked to cheap imports.
- Need for energy security measures post PM Ujjwala Yojana (2016) to ensure LPG supply resilience.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Index of Eight Core Industries (ICI):
- Comprises Coal, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Refinery Products, Fertilizers, Steel, Cement, Electricity.
- Accounts for ~40% of Index of Industrial Production (IIP).
- Released monthly by the Ministry of Commerce & Industry.
- GDP (Gross Domestic Product):
- Measures total value of goods and services produced within a country.
- Components: Consumption (C), Investment (I), Government Spending (G), Net Exports (X-M).
- Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY):
- Launched in 2016.
- Provides free LPG connections to women from BPL households.
- Aims at clean energy access and health improvement.
- Change in Stocks:
- Part of GDP accounting.
- Reflects inventory accumulation; high levels indicate low demand or overproduction.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Impact on Economic Growth:
- Weak core sector growth undermines industrial output and infrastructure development.
- Declining energy production affects energy security and import dependence.
- Energy Security Concerns:
- Heavy reliance on imports exposes India to global price shocks and geopolitical risks.
- Domestic production decline contradicts goals of Atmanirbhar Bharat in energy.
- Demand-Supply Imbalance:
- Rising inventories reflect demand slowdown, affecting manufacturing cycles.
- Could lead to job losses and reduced investments.
- Global Economic Linkages:
- High crude prices increase inflationary pressures and current account deficit (CAD).
- External shocks amplify vulnerabilities in emerging economies like India.
- Policy Gaps:
- Lack of long-term strategy for hydrocarbon exploration and reserve building.
- Insufficient integration of renewable energy transition with fossil fuel management.
- Way Forward:
- Boost domestic exploration and production (E&P) in oil and gas.
- Diversify energy mix toward renewables and green hydrogen.
- Strengthen strategic petroleum reserves.
- Enhance demand-side stimulus to revive consumption.
- Improve data accuracy and transparency in GDP estimation.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS Paper 3 – Indian Economy (Growth, Infrastructure, Energy Security)
• Prelims – Core Sector Index, GDP Components, Government Schemes (PMUY)
