Oil conundrum: On India’s energy imports from Russia
Union Ministry of Commerce and Industry (MCI) data on India’s May crude imports show that receipts from Russia had reached the pre-sanction levels of more than 40%, which is also the highest in two years. Though India has defended this as commercially prudent, its yuan-based payments give China an edge to internationalise its currency at India’s expense, even if it has no bearing on the domestic strength of the Indian rupee due to strict capital controls. Oil import concentration from a single source, and paying a premium, is risky for India, which has long pursued a diversified energy strategy.
- ▪Union Ministry of Commerce and Industry (MCI) data on India’s May crude imports show that receipts from Russia had reached the pre-sanction levels of more than 40%, which is also the highest in two years.
- ▪Though India has defended this as commercially prudent, its yuan-based payments give China an edge to internationalise its currency at India’s expense, even if it has no bearing on the domestic strength of the Indian rupee due to strict cap
- ▪Oil import concentration from a single source, and paying a premium, is risky for India, which has long pursued a diversified energy strategy.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
Union Ministry of Commerce and Industry (MCI) data on India’s May crude imports show that receipts from Russia had reached the pre-sanction levels of more than 40%, which is also the highest in two years. Though India has defended this as commercially prudent, its yuan-based payments give China an edge to internationalise its currency at India’s expense, even if it has no bearing on the domestic strength of the Indian rupee due to strict capital controls. Oil import concentration from a single source, and paying a premium, is risky for India, which has long pursued a diversified energy strategy. Moreover, sourcing fuel from the Gulf spot market amid evolving sanctions has its own risks. Secondary sanctions could hit trade channels, exposing Indian refiners to severe supply shocks.
…
Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at The Hindu.