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The Gulf calling as India rethinks its oil map beyond Russia

The Gulf calling as India rethinks its oil map beyond Russia

Time of Indiaa day ago
India is preparing to lean more on
West Asian oil suppliers
such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Iraq, as the United States tightens the screws over its imports of Russian crude, reported Mint citing people familiar with the matter.
For decades, India's refiners sourced most of their crude from West Asia.
That changed three years ago when Russia, shut out of European markets after invading Ukraine, began offering deep discounts.
Saudi Aramco and Abu Dhabi National Oil Co., the energy flagships of Saudi Arabia and the UAE and among West Asia's top crude oil producers, are now back on the list of suppliers India may turn to.
As per the report, import of Russian oil will continue, but India is also looking at diversifying its imports, and higher supplies from West Asia are being looked at.
The lure of Russian crude has dimmed. Discounts have narrowed to around $2 a barrel, and India's purchases have slipped, though Russia still accounts for 36% of total imports, up from just 2.5% before February 2022.
In FY25, Russia was India's biggest supplier with $50.28 billion in exports, followed by Iraq ($27.35 billion), Saudi Arabia ($20 billion) and the UAE ($13.86 billion). In the first two months of FY26, Russia shipped $9.16 billion worth of crude to India, ahead of Iraq ($5.36 billion), Saudi Arabia ($3.26 billion), the UAE ($2.8 billion) and the US ($2.7 billion).
'Inquiries for West Asian oil have already increased of late,' an industry executive told Mint, requesting anonymity.
India's refiners can handle both Russian Urals and heavier West Asian grades more easily than lighter US oil such as West Texas Intermediate. This makes Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the UAE natural alternatives. Alongside state-run companies,
Reliance Industries
and Nayara Energy are also major importers.
Price, however, could be a sticking point. West Asian producers rarely give discounts, and the landed cost after shipping and insurance often tops the headline price. The September Brent contract is currently trading at $66.64 a barrel. Saudi Arabia also charges Asian buyers a premium, and in July raised prices for August deliveries by $1–2.20 a barrel above the regional benchmark, Bloomberg reported.
Still, supply may not be an issue. Opec – led by Saudi Arabia and including the UAE – has about five million barrels a day of spare capacity. 'It may be an opportunity for India to reopen its oil requirements to suppliers across the globe,' said Gaurav Moda, partner and leader for energy at EY Parthenon India. 'Multiple countries may willingly compete to re-establish their supplies as a critical and ongoing share of India's crude basket… a potential win-win for all involved.'
The policy shift is happening as New Delhi and Washington clash over energy trade. US President Donald Trump has doubled tariffs on Indian imports of Russian oil to 50%, effective August 27, in a bid to choke Moscow's war revenues. India has called the move 'unfair, unjustified and unreasonable,' with the Ministry of External Affairs saying its buying decisions are based on market factors and the need to ensure energy security.
Despite the pressure, India continues to buy Russian oil. Iraq, meanwhile, boosted shipments to India in 2022 and 2023 by offering discounts of its own.
India does not import from Iran or Venezuela, both under US sanctions. Russian crude is not sanctioned, but the G7 has capped its price at $60 a barrel, a limit the EU will lower to about $47 from September. China and India remain Russia's biggest customers.
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