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India has removed restrictions on supplies of commercial liquified petroleum gas imposed during the Middle East war when energy supplies were hit by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
India, the world's most populous country, is the second-largest importer of LPG, much of it from the Middle East. A fifth of global oil and gas usually pass through the waterway, which was shut after the start of the US-Iran war in late February.
The government ended the restrictions late June 25 on "non-domestic packed LPG and restored supplies to the levels prevailing prior to the West Asia crisis", the petroleum ministry said in a statement.
"The supply of bulk LPG, which had been suspended at the onset of the crisis, has been relaxed by 50 percent of the pre-crisis consumption levels," the statement added.
"The restoration follows the recent improvement in the LPG supply situation."
The decision follows improved energy cargo passing through the Strait of Hormuz after Iran and the US signed a deal that included opening the strategic waterway.
During the crisis, the government raised prices for LPG, a primary cooking fuel for millions of households.
Last month India also approved a nearly $4 billion plan for expanding coal gasification -- a cleaner process to burn coal -- aiming to ease energy supply pressures caused by the war.
Supply disruptions through the Gulf routes piled pressure on India's economy, clouding growth forecasts.
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