India Awaits Restoration of Cheap Iran Oil Imports Following Hormuz
Opening up
After
months of shortages and uncertainty, India sees an opportunity to restore a once-crucial
energy relationship.
Point Summary
·
India
could benefit greatly if the U.S.-Iran agreement reopens the Strait of Hormuz and restores
Iranian oil exports.
·
A
recent report found India had only 9–10
days of oil reserves, far lower than Japan and South Korea.
·
The
war-related energy crisis caused fuel shortages, higher prices, and disruptions
to industry and households.
·
Iran
was once India’s second-largest oil supplier, providing about 14% of crude imports in 2009.
·
India
stopped importing Iranian oil in 2019 due to U.S. sanctions.
·
Indian
refiners can quickly process and utilize different grades of crude oil, giving India
an advantage if Iranian supplies return.
·
India’s
strategic location allows faster and cheaper transport of Gulf oil compared with
countries such as China.
·
Frequent
changes in U.S. sanctions policies on Iran, Russia, and Venezuela have created uncertainty
for India’s long-term energy planning.
·
India
remains cautious about future trade and investment opportunities with Iran, including
projects linked to regional connectivity.
·
Lower-cost
Iranian oil could reduce fuel prices and strengthen India’s energy security.
·
India
is also expanding petroleum reserves and investing in renewable energy to reduce
dependence on imported fuels.
·
Cheaper
Iranian crude could help ease economic pressures caused by energy shortages, inflation,
and other challenges facing the Indian economy.
[ABS
News Service/20.06.2026]
The timing could hardly have been better for
India.
After months of war-driven supply disruptions
and soaring energy prices, one of the world’s largest importers of oil and gas was running dangerously low
on fuel. A report released on Wednesday by the Council on Energy, Environment and
Water, a New Delhi-based think tank, found that India had just nine to 10 days’
worth of oil reserves remaining. Japan and South Korea, which are similarly dependent
on imports from the Persian Gulf, each held roughly 200 days’ worth.
If the preliminary agreement between the United
States and Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and begin lifting restrictions on
Iranian oil exports holds, it offers the prospect of much-needed relief.
Few countries stand to gain more than India.
Though India’s economy is routinely hailed
as the fastest-growing among the world’s major nations, it has come
under increasing
strain since
the start of the war. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has warned of hard
times ahead, raised fuel prices and tightened restrictions on overseas
spending. Shortages
of cooking
gas were felt
in households immediately and parts of India’s
industrial base
eventually started shutting down.
Iran was once among India’s most important
energy suppliers, before American sanctions pushed New Delhi to sever ties. As recently
as 2009, Iranian oil accounted for 14 percent of India’s crude imports, making Iran
its second-largest supplier. By 2019, under pressure from President Trump during
his first term, India had stopped buying Iranian oil altogether.
Given the supply crunch, India has little
choice but to buy oil wherever it can.
“We will take the cheapest barrel available,
whether it is Russian or Iranian,” said Rajeev Lala, a director at S&P Global
Energy based in Gurgaon, India. But he pointed out that India has a “rare ability”
to capitalize on the return of Iranian crude.
India’s location and the flexibility of its
refiners allow it to pivot quickly toward new supplies, including heavier grades
of crude that require more intensive processing.
“There are very few countries that can take
all kinds of crude at any volume” Mr. Lala said.
The world’s largest refinery belongs to India’s
Reliance Industries and sits directly across the Arabian Sea from the Strait of
Hormuz. Oil tankers from the Gulf take two to three times longer to reach China’s
giant refineries. They can complete a round trip to India in less time than it takes
to make a one-way voyage to ports on China’s Pacific coast.
In recent years, India has been forced to
swap suppliers abruptly as Washington repeatedly changed the rules governing which
countries it could buy oil from.
U.S. sanctions gradually pushed India away
from Iranian crude. China, by contrast, continued buying Iranian oil and became,
by far, Tehran’s largest buyer. After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, discounted Russian
crude briefly
filled India’s supply gap — until Washington moved to penalize those purchases as
well. Oil from Venezuela followed a similar trajectory, first prohibited and then
permitted again earlier this year.
The rules regarding Russia have changed repeatedly
since 2025.
Duttatreya Das, a former executive at India’s largest
state-owned oil company, said it has become increasingly difficult to predict American
policy because of what he described as repeated “flip-flops” on Russian oil.
“There have been so many changes, you hardly
know what to expect from the U.S. now,” he said. The uncertainty, he added, makes
it difficult to sign long-term supply agreements.
Even so, New Delhi may remain cautious about
Mr. Trump’s latest position on trade with Iran. India still does not know whether
the terms of the agreement allow it to revive stalled investments in an Iranian
port that was intended to give it access to Central Asia without passing through
Pakistan.
Other countries, farther from the Gulf, could
also benefit from revived trade between India and Iran. India’s refiners are capable
of exporting huge quantities of diesel, jet fuel and other products derived from
crude oil. Its proximity to Iran’s oil fields means it is “able to turbocharge everything
onto the global markets,” Mr. Lala said.
Having been burned by the current crisis,
India is taking future disruptions more seriously. It is expanding its strategic
petroleum reserve, blending more ethanol into its gasoline and accelerating investment
in solar power and other renewable
energy sources,
even at the cost of deepening its reliance on imports from China, its great geopolitical
rival.
The energy crunch is not the only challenge
facing the Indian economy. El Niño, a weak monsoon and a weakening
currency are all
putting pressure on government finances. Mr. Lala said New Delhi may eventually
seek to capture some of the benefits of cheaper Iranian crude by telling oil companies:
“Share the savings that you accrue by buying Iranian oil.”