
Wastage as an economic, environmental opportunity
The chairman of ONGC, Arun Singh, and I were sitting in the Gaya airport lounge after addressing the IIM Bodh Gaya convocation in early April when I noticed some inefficiency at the airport and mentioned to him Kunal Shah's attention-grabbing comment about 'inefficiency being the world's biggest employer'. He smiled and offered another profound observation 'India's biggest opportunity is curbing waste'. He went on to say India and the world both need it and defended his argument with some telling statistics in the energy sector. This article is a result of his insight. In this era of tariffs, reciprocal tariffs, and punitive tariffs, our single biggest import item is oil. How much wastage is there in the use of oil, gas, and power?
In this piece, we do not take up the wastage that bedevils our agriculture, especially its management of water; we focus only on energy use. Last year, India's oil bill stood at $137 billion. India consumes around 2,300 million barrels of oil though it produces only about 210 million barrels of crude oil a year. India's domestic production so far has only produced ~2.5 billion tonnes cumulatively, requiring us to import the bulk of our oil need.
It is odd that a country of India's size does not have greater oil reserves. The fact is that it does. India has 12 billion tonnes of verified and proven oil and oil equivalent hydrocarbon reserves. Many estimates put the theoretical limit closer to 42 billion tonnes of oil and oil equivalent hydrocarbon reserves. However, this oil is not as easily accessible as in a clutch of West Asian and other oil-exporting countries. India only extracts about 35% of the oil from a domestic well on average. Most drilling sites are undersea ones and, after a certain depth, are not easy to extract economically.
Despite oil's importance to India, there has been little technological innovation to make more domestic extraction, in a manner that makes economic sense, possible. Hence, most of the oil below the ground stays there. We import the bulk of our needs. In a Ricardian world (after David Ricardo, one of classical economics' giants) where global trade and comparative production advantages of countries maximally benefit national economies, that might have been fine. But, in today's splintering world, this leaves us exposed.
There is a lot that can be done — from utilising state-of-the-art techniques for acquiring reservoir data to advanced drilling methodologies. Even a 10% increase in the overall recovery factor would have reduced our overall import bill by $12 billion annually over the past 10 years. To a lesser extent, the wastage extends to natural gas, too. Natural gas prices have been volatile after the Russia-Ukraine conflict. India is dependent on imports for half of its overall consumption. The gas lost during the overall transmission is referred to as Lost and Unaccounted for Gas (LUAG) and is computed at around 2.7%.
If we dig further, we find that the internal combustion engine (ICE) does not use fuel efficiently. The latest ICE cars operate at an efficiency level of around 30%. If ICE engines operate at the efficiency of electric vehicles (EVs) — around 90% — we could cut 33 million metric tonnes of India's oil demand. Every five percentage points of improvement reduces oil demand by about 2,000 tonnes. If the ICE engines operated at the same efficiency levels as EVs, it would have an impact of $19 billion on India's oil import bill. Not only would we import less oil, but it would also be a boon for the environment too. For instance, by converting all ICE vehicles in Delhi to EVs, we can reduce PM2.5 levels by about 40 points on the air quality index. However, the topic of wastage does not end there.
Just consider other instances of fuel consumption; imagine how much fuel airlines consume circling airports due to the lack of runways before landing. Similarly, ICE trucks transporting goods, apart from the poor efficiency in fuel-energy conversion, often return to their depots empty or with half loads due to information gaps and the absence of an efficient clearing platform. This raises logistics costs and makes manufacturing in India more expensive.
The problem of wastage extends equally to power consumption as well. India's technical losses in transmission and distribution have significantly reduced the 'green' impact of EVs. Despite good progress in adding renewable energy capacity, India's overall power consumption is still dominated by thermal sources (contributing over 70% of the power drawn). The thermal-dominated grid incurs large transmission and distribution losses of around 15%. While significant progress has been made to address this, we are still four to five times more inefficient than China. Even a 1% reduction in the losses reduces the overall carbon footprint by around 2,400 million metric tonnes of CO2 equivalent. This is equal to converting all the four-wheelers in Delhi to EVs.
Wastage is a big consumer of energy in India, a consumer we should not cater to today. As the world becomes more volatile and our economy bigger, en route to becoming the third largest economy in the world, the whole world would like us to consume less. As the explorer, Robert Swan, said, 'The greatest threat to our planet is the belief that somebody else will save it.' Let's begin a war on wastage to help ourselves!
Janmejaya Sinha is chairman, BCG India, and Kaustubh Verma is managing director and partner, BCG. The views expressed are personal.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
7 hours ago
- Time of India
ONGC Share Price Live Updates: ONGC's performance remains stable with a beta of 1.0172
06 Jun 2025 | 08:44:36 AM IST Discover the ONGC Stock Liveblog, your ultimate resource for real-time updates and insightful analysis on a prominent stock. Keep track of ONGC with the latest details, including: Last traded price 237.77, Market capitalization: 299121.3, Volume: 8941808, Price-to-earnings ratio 8.27, Earnings per share 28.74. Our comprehensive coverage combines fundamental and technical indicators to provide you with a comprehensive view of ONGC's performance. Stay informed about breaking news that can sway ONGC's trajectory in the market. With our expert insights and stock recommendations, make well-informed financial decisions. Join us on this journey as we explore the exciting potential of ONGC. The data points are updated as on 08:44:36 AM IST, 06 Jun 2025 Show more
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
a day ago
- First Post
‘West Asia okay with putting Pak on FATF grey list': Owaisi on Op Sindoor outreach
Owaisi was a part of an all-party delegation that visited Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Bahrain to brief international partners on India's response to the April 22 terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam read more Hyderabad Member of Parliament (MP) Asaduddin Owaisi has highlighted how his Operation Sindoor delegation, which toured four West Asian nations over the past week, left no stone unturned to expose Pakistan's support to terrorism in a bid to get the nation back on the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) grey list. Owaisi was a part of an all-party delegation that visited Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Bahrain to brief international partners on India's response to the April 22 terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam under Operation Sindoor. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Speaking to Network 18, the Indian lawmaker reflected on the importance of the visit, given how influential they are in terms of Pakistan. 'These four countries which we visited they are very important for us because they were part of middle East, FATF and earlier also many of these countries didn't object to Pakistan being into FATF they are quite influential also in terms of Pakistan,' he said, adding, 'Our interlocutors we have given them lot of examples lot of proofs as well how Pakistan is supporting this terror activities'. He added that the first thing New Delhi needs to ensure is that Pakistan gets back on the FATF grey list. On Pakistan's support to terrorism Owaisi also recalled telling the hosts in the four nations about Pakistan's direct links to the Pahalgam terror attack and The Resistance Front (TRF), the terror outfit believed to be behind the massacre. 'We also told them how Pakistan with the help of China didn't allow the naming of TRF in the resolution that was passed in UN Security Council about the Pahalgam attack,' he said. He also slammed the April 15 speech by Pakistani Army chief Asim Munir, who has now been elevated to the rank of field marshal, in which he 'talked about Kashmir being a jugular vein and how Pakistan will stand with all these people for opposing India.' On China's support to Pakistan Owaisi threw light on China's role in emboldening Islamabad's support to anti-India terror elements in the region. He added that Operation Sindoor outreach gave India an opportunity to expose China's support to Pakistan's terror factory. 'I had tried to expose Pakistan lies there wrong messaging against India and it was a good opportunity to expose how Pakistan works that without China they are nothing and they are handicapped without china help that they get,' he added. On loans to Pakistan Owaisi also called on the international financial institutions to impose stricter monetary controls on aid and assistance granted to Islamabad for developmental projects. 'Now there has to be monitoring of these loans that Pakistan is getting from Asian Development Bank (ADB) and world bank and IMF, otherwise these funds will not go to the upliftment of the Pakistani people, to eradicate poverty there.' Since India's four-day military standoff with Pakistan starting May 7, the IMF and the ADB have dished out aid worth millions to Pakistan 'for developmental projects' despite strong objections by India. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD


Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
IndiGo announces flight to Vizag from city
Bhubaneswar: Direct flight services from Bhubaneswar to Visakhapatnam will begin soon, private carrier IndiGo has announced. It will be fifth southern city to be connected to the state capital after Chennai, Bengaluru, Kochi, and Hyderabad. The airlines, however, has not announced the date of commencement of the flight. The expansion follows IndiGo's maiden international service from Bhubaneswar to Abu Dhabi, scheduled to begin on June 12. "Bhubaneswar used to have a one-stop and indirect flight to Visakhapatnam, a major destination for fliers from Odisha. But now, there will be a direct flight opening up new opportunities in business, health and education sectors," said an airport officer. In April, three more domestic destinations — Ghaziabad, Port Blair and Goa — were connected by air to Bhubaneswar, taking the total domestic destinations to 28. Visakhapatnam will become the 29th domestic destination. Abu Dhabi will be the fourth international destination to be connected to Odisha's capital, and the second West Asian city to be connected by air. Two destinations in West Asia opens a gateway to Gulf countries, Europe, North America and Canada with just one stop.