Kirloskar Ferrous Industries Limited has resumed partial operations at its Solapur manufacturing facility after a brief stoppage caused by a shortage of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG). In a regulatory filing to BSE Limited dated 21 March 2026, the company stated that one of two High Pressure Moulding Lines (HPMLs) at the plant was back in operation, with an alternate fuel substituted for LPG. The company added that the temporary halt had no material financial impact on the business.
The disruption had begun on 17 March 2026, when the company first notified regulators of the constraint. At that time, Kirloskar Ferrous disclosed that one of the two HPMLs at its Solapur plant had been affected and that management was actively working to secure alternate sources of LPG supply or explore substitute fuel options to sustain operations. The second moulding line continued to operate through the period of disruption, limiting the overall impact on production output.
The company attributed the LPG supply shortfall to disruptions in global energy markets arising from the ongoing Middle East conflict, which has placed sustained pressure on fuel availability and pricing across international supply chains. The situation is not isolated to one company — Indian manufacturers in energy-intensive industries have broadly faced heightened input cost volatility and logistical uncertainty as a consequence of geopolitical developments in the region.
LPG is a critical input in the moulding processes used in iron casting operations. In High Pressure Moulding, the fuel is used to maintain the precise temperature and process conditions required to produce castings at scale and to specification. Any sustained interruption in fuel supply can affect production throughput, scheduling commitments to customers, and overall plant efficiency.
Kirloskar Ferrous, part of the diversified Kirloskar Group, is a manufacturer of grey iron castings and pig iron, with customers primarily in the automotive and industrial machinery sectors. The company operates multiple manufacturing facilities across Maharashtra and Karnataka. Its Solapur plant is among its key production sites, equipped with mechanised moulding infrastructure to meet volume requirements from original equipment manufacturers.
The company has disclosed compliance with Regulation 30 of the SEBI (Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2015, which mandates listed entities to promptly disclose material events and developments to stock exchanges. The filing confirms that both the initial disruption and the resumption of operations were communicated to BSE within the regulatory timeframe.
The broader context in which this disruption occurred points to a structural vulnerability that manufacturers dependent on imported or globally traded energy commodities continue to face. With the Middle East conflict showing few signs of near-term resolution, companies in sectors such as metal casting, auto components, and other process-intensive industries are increasingly expected to develop fuel diversification and supply chain resilience strategies to reduce exposure to such risks.
Kirloskar Ferrous has not indicated whether it intends to revert to LPG once supplies normalise, or whether the alternate fuel arrangement will be maintained on a longer-term basis. The company also did not specify a timeline for the full restoration of both moulding lines and said it would continue to monitor developments and provide updates as warranted.