Ahmed is an elderly man with weather-beaten skin who spends long hours on an old bicycle selling gas cylinders from door-to-door in Cairo, alerting customers to his wares by tapping the cylinders with a piece of metal. With the official price of a gas cylinder is 8 Egyptian pounds, Ahmed makes his living by selling it for 20 pounds in return for carrying it into a customer¡¯s house. It is profitable but back-breaking work. ¡°Often I carry it on my back up to high floors,¡± Ahmed said.
Cylinders filled with Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) are the main source of fuel for more than 75 percent of Egyptian households, with many going to a lot of trouble to buy them for cooking and heating water. Despite their cheap, subsidized price, however, they represent a costly item on household budgets.
From a consumer¡¯s point of view, they are often inconvenient. Abeer, a mother of three, has recently moved into an apartment where a natural gas connection is available, ending her use of cylinder gas. ¡°Sometimes, it emptied while I was cooking, or when one of us was taking a shower.¡±