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Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on May 10 appealed for broad behavioural measures to conserve fuel and foreign exchange as global energy prices surge amid the West Asia conflict.
Speaking in Hyderabad, he urged citizens to prioritise workāfromāhome and virtual meetings, use public transport, carāpool, and electric vehicles, delay nonāessential foreign travel and avoid buying gold for a year.
Modi also called for lower edibleāoil consumption, a 50% cut in chemical fertiliser use by farmers and a shift to natural farming and solar irrigation.
The appeals come as crude prices spiked after disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, putting pressure on Indiaās import bill, state oil firms and foreign exchange reserves; markets reacted with a sharp fall in equities and a weaker rupee.
The government later sought to head off panic buying, saying fuel and essential stocks were adequate.
Opposition leaders criticised the appeals as an admission of policy failure.
Economists say the move aims for voluntary demand moderation to ease import pressures while leaving formal pricing or fiscal measures on the table.

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