The Hindu (Kolkata)

No sanctions against India for buying, refining Russian oil, say U.S. officials

The aim of sanctions and the oil ‘price cap’ is to limit revenue to Russia, say the U.S. officials; India’s oil purchases are only mandated by country’s needs and it seeks to buy them from wherever they are available at the cheapest rate, says Centre

- Suhasini Haidar

triking a conciliato­ry note on India’s imports of Russian oil, U.S. Treasury Department officials visiting Delhi said on Thursday that the aim of the U.S. sanctions and the oil “price cap” was not to limit the purchase of Russian ‘Ural’ oil, but to limit the revenues made by the “Kremlin”.

According to the officials, who are meeting their counterpar­ts and oil company representa­tives in Delhi and Mumbai during their visit on April 2 and April 5, the U.S. measures thus far, including a “second phase” of sanctions against oil shipping companies, are having some impact. However, they brushed aside questions about the rising price of Ural oil, now nearing $80 per barrel, and the narrowing of Russian discounts to Indian refiners.

“Our purpose is to limit revenue to Russia but not dictate that no trade can be done in Russian oil,” said Anna Morris, Acting Assistant Secretary for Terrorist Financing at the U.S. Trea

Ssury Department.

“Once Russian oil is refined, from a technical perspectiv­e, it is no longer Russian oil. If it is refined in a country and then exported, from a sanctions perspectiv­e it belongs to that country, it is not an import from Russia,” Ms. Morris added, responding to a question about whether India had been “oil laundering” Russian energy for European markets, as alleged by a European think tank CREA report.

The Petroleum Ministry had last year called the report “misleading” and a “deceptive effort to tarnish India’s image”.

The officials, Ms. Morris and the U.S. Assistant Secretary for Economic Policy Eric Van Nostrand, also made it clear that no Indian company had thus far been sanctioned by the U.S. for oil purchases from Russia. Since 2022, a Mumbaibase­d Indian company has been sanctioned over purchases of Iranian oil, while a Bengalurub­ased hightech company was put on a list of firms facing the U.S. and the E.U. sanctions for engaging in “dual use” technology trade with Russia.

Asked about the U.S. officials’ visit, and India’s stand on the price cap, the External Affairs Ministry said that all oil purchases were only mandated by India’s needs. “Anything to do with energy security and oil purchases on the internatio­nal market are guided by India’s energy security requiremen­ts. This is essentiall­y a commercial venture, and we are seeking to buy oil from wherever we receive the cheapest available supplies,” Ministry spokespers­on Randhir Jaiswal saidon Thursday.

Major purchasers

Since the war in Ukraine began in 2022, India and China have become the major purchasers of Russian oil. In January this year, Russian President Vladimir Putin had praised India for pursuing an “independen­t foreign policy” despite pressure from the west to curtail trade, energy, and defence ties with Moscow. “The largest foreign investment in India has come from Russia. $23 billion was invested by our company Rosneft for the acquisitio­n of an oil refinery, a network of gas stations, a port, and so on,” President Putin had said, referring to the installati­ons at Vadinar in Gujarat.

Along with other G7 countries, the U.S. had announced a “price cap” on Ural oil in December 2022, so that only those importing Russian oil at a rate below $60 per barrel could avail of shippers, insurers, and other ancillary services from companies that operate in G7 countries. In effect, that has meant that Russian exporters have had to offer Ural oil at heavy discounts to buyers, the officials said.

In an article on the U.S. Treasury website, Ms. Morris and Mr. Nostrand had also claimed success in the second phase of the price cap measures announced in October 2023, ensuring that Russian oil was offered at discounts ranging from $12 to $19 over the past year, and that export volumes “remained stable”. Other reports have pointed to Indian buyers facing problems over payments for oil in other currencies, and turning away tankers from companies like Russian shipper Sovcomflot, now under sanctions as well. In Moscow, the Russian Foreign Ministry countered the claims, saying that Russian oil supplies to India remain at a “steadily high level”.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Trade ties: Since the war in Ukraine began in 2022, India and China have become the major purchasers of Russian oil.
FILE PHOTO Trade ties: Since the war in Ukraine began in 2022, India and China have become the major purchasers of Russian oil.

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