The Prime Minister's Office said on 1 May 2026 that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had shared an article by Union Minister Dharmendra Pradhan on the transformative impact of the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana. The release linked clean cooking energy, women's empowerment and targeted subsidy transfer as parts of one welfare intervention.
The Prime Minister noted that the article described a major policy shift: women are no longer seen merely as beneficiaries of policy, but as its starting point. This framing is significant for governance because it places the household user, especially women managing cooking energy, at the centre of programme design. It also explains why social-sector schemes are judged not only by coverage but by dignity, agency and daily-life improvements.
The release stated that the programme expanded LPG coverage and enabled targeted subsidy transfer reaching over 10 crore women. It also said the transition to clean cooking had reduced household air pollution and improved well-being. These are the core facts for exam use: coverage expansion, direct benefit targeting, cleaner household energy and welfare gains. The focus on women also links energy policy to health, gender and public finance outcomes.
The Prime Minister's post further said the focus now is on sustained use, affordability and ensuring energy justice. This is the implementation challenge after initial connection expansion. A scheme can expand access, but its long-term value depends on whether households continue using clean cooking fuel, whether prices remain affordable, and whether the benefit reaches those for whom it was designed. The 1 May release therefore presents Ujjwala as a mature welfare scheme moving from access to sustained, equitable use.
