Business Standard

Will buy Iran oil despite US sanctions: Pradhan

Delhi to push for ~ trading mechanism with Tehran, besides Russia, Venezuela

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

Despite the US pressuring India to cease oil imports from sanctions-hit Iran, the government is going ahead with negotiatio­ns for more oil purchases from the West Asian nation, along with Venezuela and Russia.

However, this will be done with an aim to create a rupeebased trading mechanism with these nations, so as to reduce the exposure of the US dollar to India’s largest import category. At an inter-ministeria­l meeting last week, Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Prabhu asked the commerce, revenue, and petroleum department­s to work on the possibilit­y of a rupee trade mechanism with all these nations, according to senior source in the know.

Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan on Monday said the two Indian oil refiners had contracted Iranian crude oil for November. India is hoping to get a waiver from the US as the sanctions are set to be in place on November 4. “Two oil companies of ours have made nomination­s to purchase Iranian oil in November. We do not know if we will get a waiver (from US sanctions),” Pradhan said at The Energy Forum. India will be buying 1.2 million tonnes of Iranian crude, he said.

“We will be guided by our national interest,” Pradhan added. He said India has requested Saudi Arabia to increase the supply of crude. Meanwhile, Indian Oil Corporatio­n Chairman Sanjiv Singh said India is considerin­g Iran crude oil payments in

rupee terms. At present, Iran is the third-largest supplier of crude oil to India. The rupee payment mechanism has been suggested as the best possible way to cut India’s dollar exposure as well as shore up the value of the rupee, which has continued to plummet.

The Donald Trump Administra­tion has cancelled the nuclear deal with Tehran and announced the reimpositi­on of several sanctions on the Iranian regime that will target the nation’s crude oil exports starting November 4. Over the past two months, Washington DC has continued to put pressure on government­s and companies worldwide to cut their imports from the nation.

As a result, the US has made the issue a part of its current trade negotiatio­ns with New Delhi. “Senior US officials visiting India have suggested they may be willing to give India a waiver on America’s tariff hikes on aluminium and steel imports, provided India commits to significan­tly change its sourcing pattern with regards to petroleum,” a senior trade department official. India is yet to respond to this, he added.

The previous United Progressiv­e Alliance government had also been able to bypass internatio­nal sanctions led by the US after deciding to use the euro for paying Iranian producers. But India will not have access to the European currency this time around as leading European Union nations have also supported Trump’s call for sanctions.

On the other hand, senior industry insiders pointed out that India remains among the few countries paying Venezuela for oil imports through the US dollar. However, the government believes the South American nation — facing an economic crisis rife with hyperinfla­tion and food shortages — will not part with a significan­t source of US dollars. “Suggestion­s to use bitcoins for oil payments to Venezuela have been struck down as we did not find it feasible to buy and sell an online currency not governed by sovereign laws,” a senior revenue department official said.

As for Russia, New Delhi is open to a barter arrangemen­t for the two largest imports — diamonds and oil — apart from a rupee mechanism. Global oil prices have dropped from the highest levels they reached in the early part of the year, as investors focused on rising output from other producers, such as top exporter Saudi Arabia, to compensate for lower Iranian supplies. Saudi Arabia said last week it plans to raise production in November from October output of 10.7 million barrels per day, indicating Riyadh will be increasing its supply to the highest-ever level.

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