The Asian Age

India to win US waiver for oil

- THE ASIAN AGE

■ account which can be used for purchases from India, they said, adding the US does not want any money to reach Iran.

Sources, however, said no final decision has been made and an announceme­nt is likely just before sanctions on Iran are reimposed on November 5.

India had continued to import crude oil from Iran despite the threat of sanctions. Two of its refiners — Indian Oil and MRPL — have even made nomination­s to buy 1.25 million ■ tonnes of oil from Iran in November.

India, the world’s thirdbigge­st oil consumer, meets more than 80 per cent of its oil needs through imports. Iran is its third- largest supplier after Iraq and Saudi Arabia and meets about 10 per cent of total needs.

Trump in May withdrew from the 2015 nuclear accord with Iran, reimposing economic sanctions against the Persian Gulf nation. Some sanctions took effect from August 6, while those affecting the oil and banking sectors will start from November 5.

Currently, India pays its third largest oil supplier in euros using European banking channels. These channels would get blocked from November.

During the first round of sanctions when EU joined the US in imposing financial restrictio­ns, India initially used a Turkish bank to pay Iran for the oil it bought, but beginning February 2013 paid nearly half of the oil import bill in rupees while keeping the remainder pending till the opening of payment routes. It began clearing the dues in 2015 when the restrictio­ns were eased.

Besides, New Delhi sought to get around the restrictio­ns by supplying goods, including wheat, soybean meal and consumer products, to Iran in exchange for oil.

Sources said this time around the entire 100 per cent of Iranian oil import bill can be paid in rupees through the escrow account.

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