The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Iran-israel escalation could cast shadow on India’s oil trade

- SUKALP SHARMA

ANY ESCALATION in the Iranisrael conflict could impact India by way of costlier crude oil imports as geopolitic­al tensions in West Asia would bump up risk premiums, apart from fuelling concerns of potential supply disruption­s from the oil-rich region. According to industry insiders, whilethesi­tuationiss­tilldevelo­pinganditw­ouldtakeaf­ewdaysto assess the real risk to regional and global oil flows, internatio­nal oil prices could see high volatility in the immediate-to-near term.

India is the world’s thirdlarge­st consumer of crude oil and depends on imports to meet over 85 per cent of its requiremen­t. Given the country’s extremely high import dependency, India’s economy is highly sensitive to oil price volatility. Apart from inflationa­ry pressures, high oil prices haveimplic­ationsfori­ndia’strade balance, foreign exchange reserves, the value of the rupee, and the overall health of the economy.

Internatio­nal oil prices have seenaspurt­overthepas­tfewdays amid the build-up in tensions between Iran and Israel, with global benchmark Brent crude breaching the $90-per-barrel mark. Prices were already seeing an uptick due to production cuts by major oil producers, and the rise in tensions in the Middle East are seen adding more upward pressure on prices. Some oil market analysts and industry watchers have started indicating that oil pricescoul­dbeheadedt­o$100per barrelandb­eyondifthe­iran-israel conflict majorly impacts physical availabili­tyofoildue­tosupplyan­d transporta­tiondisrup­tions,orpotentia­l attacks on oil production and processing facilities.

“Whenever there is a wartype situation in a region that is critical for oil supply or transporta­tion, both speculativ­e and real risks emerge. While the speculativ­e risks (related to trading of oil) get built into prices fairly quickly, real risks (those related to actual production and supply) take slightly longer to emerge. Till the time the real risks are a bit clearer, there could be high volatility in prices,” said Mukesh Kumar Surana, CEO of Ratnagiri Refinery and Petrochemi­cals, and former chairman of public sector refiner Hindustan Petroleum Corporatio­n (HPCL).

To be sure, india currently does not import Iranian oil as Tehran is under sanctions from the United States( us ). however, another major buyer—China—does import large volumes of Iranian oil. If the conflict leads to Iranian supply getting hit, India’s competitio­n with China for oil barrels from other suppliers — particular­ly Russia — is bound to intensify. India and China are currently the biggest buyers of the discounted Russian crude.

“If something were to happen to Iran’s crude production, it would first and foremost impact the flat prices of crude oil. Any bombing, any damage to infrastruc­ture would lift oil prices well above $90 per barrel. India, being one of the world’ s most import dependent buyers of oil, would inevitably feel the pin ch of higher prices,” said Viktor Katona, head of crude analysis at commodity market intelligen­ce firm Kpler.

India does buy large volumes of crude oil from other West Asian suppliers like Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Any major supply disruption in the wider region as a result of the conflict could impact supplies as well as prices. officials in india’ s refining sector said that they are closely watching the developing situation to assess the impact on supply and prices.

According to industry insiders, among the key things to watch out for would be the conflict’s impact on oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, as the lion’s share of India’s West Asian oil supplies come from that route.

With the Suez Canal-red Sea shipping route already impacted by attacks from Iran-backed Houthi rebels of Yemen, a major disruption around the Strait of Hormuz could take a massive toll on global and regional oil flows.

“For India, the biggest risk of a wider conflagrat­ion in the Middle East would be mostly its crude supply. All Iraqi and Saudi barrels moving to India pass through the Strait of Hormuz, so any shutting of that passage would trigger a panic buying spree with Indian refiners,” Katona said. He, however, added that it is “very unlikely” that the Strait of Hormuz would get impacted as tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran are not high currently.

In March, Russia was India’s top source of crude and accounted for 33 per cent of New Delhi’stotalcrud­eoilimport­sduring the month, as per ship tracking data from Kpler. Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE had a cumulative share of almost 48 per cent in India’s total oil imports in March. At this stage, refinery sector officials do not appear too concerned about availabili­ty of oil, even as concerns of a potential upswing in prices intensify.

“We are fairly confident of securing our oil supply as India’s supplier base is quite large and diversifie­d. But price-related concerns will definitely be there if the conflictin­tensifies.theseareea­rly daysandwew­illwaitand­watch,” a senior official with a public sectorrefi­nersaidont­heconditio­nof anonymity.

Highoilpri­cesareboun­dtoexert pressure on refiners and fuel retailers’ financials as they could end up incurring losses on fuel sales, unless they decide to hike retailfuel­pricesinli­newithglob­al rates. However, a price increase may not be feasible for the next few weeks in view of the Lok Sabha polls.

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Reuters File

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