India’s close ties with Russia have seen it ramp up purchases of bargain commodities in the two and a half months since the invasion of Ukraine began.
Data from S&P Global Market Intelligence shows India’s seaborne crude oil imports surpassed 4.8m barrels per day in April, the highest on record, with higher Middle East and Russian volumes displacing cargoes from further afield, such as the US, Canada and West Africa.
Russian-origin crudes hit 5% of India’s total seaborne imports in April for the first time, rising from under 1% throughout 2021 and Q1 2022.
As of May 9, almost 10m barrels of crude loading from Russia—including 970,000 barrels of Kazakhstan’s CPC Blend—have discharged in India this month. Another 16 vessels with 13m barrels are currently indicating India as their destination and are expected to arrive within the next four weeks. This includes one cargo each of CPC Blend and Siberian Light and the rest comprising Urals.
Russian exports rebounded in April by 620,000 barrels per day from the month before to 8.1m barrels per day, the International Energy Agency said in global markets update yesterday, back to their January-February average as supply was rerouted away from the US and Europe, primarily to India.
Indian politicians have been defending their decision to buy so much Russian crude while other nations look to wean themselves off Russian energy reliance in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine.
Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman recently commented: “I will put my country’s interest first and energy security first. If oil is available and at a discount, why shouldn’t I buy it?”
External affairs minister S Jaishankar, too, has weighed in on the matter. India’s total oil purchases from Russia in a month would probably be less than what Europe does in an afternoon, he said recently.
Russia has been reportedly offering discounts of as much as $30-35 per barrel on its flagship Urals grade to woo India.
It’s not just oil that the Narendra Modi-led country is keen to buy from its old friend, Russia.
In a notice released on May 5, India’s Ministry of Power instructed all power plants to increase their imports of coal. Specifically, the ministry demands that power plants designed to run on domestic coal start importing at least 10% of their requirements.
The government’s intervention comes as many states have suffered prolonged power outages since April and the country is two months into an unprecedented heatwave with reports this week of dehydrated birds falling from the skies amid the protracted 40+ degree environment. The upcoming monsoon is likely to cause additional problems and lead to lower domestic coal production, thereby adding to import requirements.
Preliminary government statistics show that India’s overall imports from Russia witnessed a more than three-fold jump to $4.67bn from a year before since the Ukraine conflict began on February 24.
Between February 24 and May 8, India’s purchases of crude oil from Russia jumped 393% to $1.86bn, while those of petroleum products surged 175% to $560m, government data shows. Similarly, imports of coal climbed 277% to $630m, and fertiliser purchases saw a multi-fold jump to $376m from $43m.
The growth in import value is aided by a rise in global commodity prices in recent months and a relatively low base but is nevertheless remarkable and shows the firm friendship between New Delhi and Moscow.
Source: Splash247
Tags: CPC Blend, Imports, Indian Crude Oil, Russaia, Ukraine
Recent Posts
Argus Green Marine Fuels Asia Conference
IndianOil tests zero-emission electric vehicle technology
India, Sri Lanka see weak bunker fuel demand in November
MBNL expands ethanol production capacity with Rs 100 crore investment
CMA CGM seeks 2025 Singapore biofuel bunker supply
Mabanaft in pact with Hapag-Lloyd to supply B30 bunker fuel
DP World Introduces Electric Transfer Vehicle at Port of Brisbane
Merchant Navy Welfare Board (India) takes a major step in expanding global presence