Times of Oman

India’s rupee trade with Russia risks harming bilateral ties

-

India has emerged as a major buyer of Russian oil over the past year, after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine triggered Western sanctions, forcing Russia to offer its crude at discounted rates.

The South Asian nation imported more oil from Russia than ever before in April, according to data from Vortexa, a ship tracking company.

In fact, Moscow became the top supplier of crude oil to India last month, with Russian supplies greater than those from Iraq and Saudi Arabia combined.

Before the war in Ukraine began in February last year, India bought very little oil from Russia.

But as sanctions cut off major Russian banks from much of the West’s payment systems, finding ways to pay for the Russian crude has become a challenge.

Over the past year, Indian importers have been paying for Russian oil and other commoditie­s mostly in Indian rupees.

But currency restrictio­ns mean Russian entities face difficulty in repatriati­ng rupees.

How big is the problem?

The snapping up of discounted Russian crude, meanwhile, has widened India’s already substantia­l trade deficit with Russia.

In the first 11 months of the 2022-23 financial year, Indian imports from Russia were worth nearly $41.5 billion (€38 billion), while exports amounted to just $2.8 billion, according to data from the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.

This has left Russian oil companies and banks with billions of rupees in their Indian bank accounts — a pile of cash they are struggling to use.

“I don’t think this situation can continue for long,” Nandan Unnikrishn­an, distinguis­hed fellow and Russia expert at the Observer Research Foundation (ORF) in New Delhi, told DW. “If both sides fail to resolve the problem, it will impact purchases of not only oil but everything.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also recently commented on the issue while attending a Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on meeting in the Indian state of Goa.

“We need to use this money. But for this, these rupees must be transferre­d in another currency, and this is being discussed now,” he was quoted by news agency Bloomberg as saying.

Close ties between India and Russia

The uncertaint­ies over payment mechanisms have also hurt defence imports, Bloomberg reported. New Delhi and Moscow share longstandi­ng political and security ties. India is a major buyer of Russian weapons, although it has been attempting to diversify its sources of military equipment, increasing­ly turning to countries like the US and France in recent years.

Russia accounted for $8.5 billion of the $18.3 billion New Delhi has spent on weapons imports since 2017, according to data from the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute.

Both sides are also in talks to reach a free trade agreement.

The Indian government has so far refrained from explicitly criticizin­g Russia’s war in Ukraine. New Delhi has abstained several times from voting on UN resolution­s against Moscow. It has, however, called for a peaceful resolution of the conflict through dialogue. The ramping up of trade ties, meanwhile, has been viewed with concern in Western capitals, as they fear it’s underminin­g the stringent sanctions regime in place against Moscow.

How can the two sides resolve the problem?

Besides the Indian rupee, the UAE dirhams and the Chinese yuan are seen by some as potential options to settle trade between India and Russia.

“Russia wants a currency that it can use to buy goods that it requires for its economy… the question is identifyin­g that currency,” said Unnikrishn­an. “Russians would be happy to use the yuan,” he underlined, pointing to their bilateral trade worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

In 2022, Russia-China commerce hit a record high of $190 billion.

But Unnikrishn­an noted that New Delhi would not be comfortabl­e allowing trade settlement in the yuan, given the tense relations between India and China due to their border disputes.

The Reuters news agency also reported in March, citing Indian officials, that the Indian government had asked banks and businesses to avoid using the yuan to pay for Russian imports.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman