Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Russia remains top crude supplier to India in January

MOSCOW WAS THE BIGGEST CRUDE SUPPLIER TO INDIA IN 2023 AND ACCOUNTED FOR 30% OF IMPORTS

- Rituraj Baruah rituraj.baruah@livemint.com

Russia remained the top supplier of oil to India in January, accounting for nearly a third of the crude brought into the country, according to data from the commerce ministry.

At $4.47 billion, the value of the crude oil supply from Russia jumped 41% year-on-year. Sequential­ly, crude imports from that country increased 14% from $3.92 billion in December 2023, the data showed.

Moscow was the biggest crude supplier to India in 2023, accounting for more than 30% of its imports, and will likely remain so through early 2024 despite the Red Sea crisis, as per a report by S&P Global Commodity Insights in January. This is significan­t because, despite Russian oil initially remaining unaffected by the Houthi attacks in the Red Sea, the situation has evolved with recent reports of Russian oil cargoes coming under attack. This has forced ships to take different routes, via the Cape of Good Hope, and traders to recalculat­e costs.

The increase in oil supplies from Russia has coincided with a year-on-year decline in imports from traditiona­l suppliers in the Gulf region. Iraq was the secondlarg­est source of crude oil for India in December, supplying $2.54 billion worth of the commodity, 5% higher year-on-year. Supplies from Saudi Arabia fell 31.3% on year to $1.55 billion in January. Among the top five suppliers, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the US followed, with their supplies to India worth $980.24 million and $107.49 million, respective­ly. The UAE saw a 6.70% rise in its oil supplies to India in January 2024, up from $918.63 million a year ago. In contrast, crude oil supplies from the US to India slumped about 91%, falling to $107.49 million in January.

Prior to the Ukraine conflict, in fiscal year 2021-22, Russian oil accounted for only 2% of India’s total oil imports, with Iraq being the top supplier, followed by Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

However, post-invasion, Russia climbed to the top, driven by substantia­l discounts on oil prices. Despite a decrease in these discounts from over $30 per barrel to $4-6 per barrel, India’s procuremen­t of Russian oil has continued, even amid Western concerns. Petroleum minister Hardeep Singh Puri has time and again said that the oil refiners would look at acquiring cheaper oil from different geographie­s to ensure affordabil­ity and availabili­ty of fuel and achieve energy security.

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