Business Standard

India’s deep discounts on Russian crude will stay

Jaishankar strongly defends India’s import of crude oil from Russia

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y New Delhi, 5 December

Even as the Group of Seven (G7) price cap on Russian crude oil enters into force as of December 5, India has been assured it will continue to receive the existing deep discounts on Russian oil, for the time being, informed officials.

“We have been assured by our Russian partners of uninterrup­ted crude supplies at the existing rates for the time being. There were a lot of reports of changes in (India’s) buying patterns after the global price cap took hold. But Indian refiners will continue benefiting from favourable purchase pacts,” said a senior official.

India stoutly defended its import of crude oil from Russia amid the Ukraine conflict with External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar asserting that New Delhi's procuremen­t was just one-sixth of the European purchase in last nine months

The price of crude supplies and potential fallouts of the price cap are also being discussed between both government­s, he added. The talks are a continuous process, but usually cover supplies for the next one to two months, he added.

Moscow remained in a tough spot as the remaining buyers of Russian crude, such as India and China, were demanding a deep discount in its flagship crude grade, Urals, even before the price cap.

The average discounts remain as high as 40 per cent on Urals, compared to the benchmark Brent crude prices, internatio­nal media reported last week from Moscow.

After shrinking for a few months from May, the level of discount has remained fairly high in recent months, an official at a state refiner said.

India’s largest historical oil supplier — Iraq — had undercut Russia beginning late June, by supplying a range of crudes that on average cost $9 per barrel less than Russian oil.

The extremely price-sensitive market had, therefore, shifted heavily in favour of Iraq. “But Russia began offering more discounts immediatel­y afterwards,” he added. Even without the price argument, the government is of the opinion that a stable supply of crude should be establishe­d from outside the West Asian region.

“While oil imports from Iraq have remained the mainstay of our purchases,

given global complicati­ons and Iraq’s volatile internal situation, India needs to create alternativ­e mechanisms,” said another official.

The share of Russian crude, which was just 0.2 per cent of the total crude import volume before Russia invaded Ukraine in February, has risen to a record 24.8 per cent in the April-september period, according to commerce department data.

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