LPG and LNG Supplies to India through Hormuz Revive Reducing Dependence
on High Price US Gas
·
Around
40
tankers
are heading to India as shipping resumes through the Strait of Hormuz following the U.S.-Iran
peace deal.
·
The
most critical cargoes are Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) shipments, which are
urgently needed for millions of Indian households that rely on cooking gas.
·
India’s
LPG imports fell by nearly 50% during the Hormuz crisis, dropping to about 51% of pre-war levels.
·
LPG
was the most severely affected fuel because of its dependence on specialized
tankers, fixed delivery schedules, and limited alternative suppliers.
·
Analysts
expect LPG
and Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) imports to recover first as Gulf
shipping operations normalize.
·
Crude
oil imports remained relatively resilient throughout the crisis, as India
diversified supplies and refiners utilized existing inventories.
·
Benchmark
Brent crude prices fell to below $77 per barrel, reflecting improved market
sentiment and easing supply concerns.
·
The
reopening of Hormuz is expected to reduce freight and insurance costs and
improve access to crude oil supplies.
·
India's
refining sector is likely to benefit, particularly with the ramp-up of the Barmer Refinery in Rajasthan.
·
Higher
refinery operations could boost exports of diesel, petrol, and jet fuel, strengthening India's
energy export earnings.
·
Former
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan described the crisis as a "wake-up call"
on India's vulnerability to global supply disruptions.
·
Rajan
emphasized the need for larger petroleum reserves, diversified supply sources,
and stronger contingency plans for critical imports.
·
He
also warned that dependence on imported renewable energy components and
pharmaceutical raw materials presents additional strategic risks.
The
reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is expected to quickly restore India's LPG
and LNG supplies, ease pressure on energy markets, and support refinery
operations. However, the crisis has highlighted the importance of stronger
energy security, strategic reserves, and supply-chain diversification for
India's long-term resilience.
[ABS News Service/18.06.2026]
Of the 40 ships waiting to sail through the
Strait of Hormuz to India, the most urgently awaited are not the giant crude
oil tankers but the vessels carrying liquefied petroleum gas, or LPG, the fuel
used by hundreds of millions of Indian households for cooking.
After months of disruption, the fragile US-Iran
peace deal – if it holds – is expected to allow shipping traffic to begin
moving normally again through the strait that links the Persian Gulf to the
Arabian Sea.
"LPG has been the most severely affected,
with (Indian) imports falling to around 51 per cent of pre-war levels,"
says senior Kpler energy analyst Sumit Ritolia. "That has created the
strongest replenishment requirement."
The strait has been severely disrupted since
late February when the Middle East conflict erupted, trapping cargoes, delaying
deliveries and sending energy markets into turmoil. While India managed to keep
much of its crude oil flowing during the crisis, LPG imports were hammered.
Roughly a fifth of the world's oil trade
usually passes through the Strait of Hormuz.
Ritolia says the recovery “is expected to occur
in phases rather than through an immediate normalisation of trade flows."
That's because different fuels were affected in different ways.
LPG imports suffered the sharpest fall because
the trade depends on special tankers, tightly scheduled deliveries and a
limited number of suppliers. When ships were delayed or unable to load, there
were few alternative sources available.
Liquefied natural gas is expected to recover
next as Gulf export terminals return to normal operations and more vessels
become available.
Crude oil, on the other hand, has proved
surprisingly resilient throughout the crisis. Benchmark Brent crude was trading
at just under $77 a barrel early on Wednesday, its lowest level since early
March.
India continued receiving large volumes of oil
because many cargoes had already left producing countries before the disruption
intensified, suppliers prioritised crude exports, and refiners were able to
draw on a broader range of sources than is possible for LPG. As a result, oil
imports slowed but never collapsed.
Ritolia describes crude as "a later-stage
normalisation story given the resilience of import flows throughout the
disruption." That resilience means there's less urgency around
replenishing crude supplies than there is around restoring LPG inventories.
Instead, analysts expect cooking gas and LNG
cargoes to dominate the first wave of recovery.
"LPG and LNG are likely to be the first
hydrocarbon flows to recover as Gulf shipping normalises, vessel availability
improves and cargo availability from key Middle Eastern suppliers
increases," Ritolia says.
The reopening is also expected to provide a
significant boost to India's refining sector.
"Improved crude accessibility, lower
freight and insurance costs, and greater supply flexibility should support
higher refinery runs," Ritolia notes, pointing to the commissioning and
ramp-up of the new Barmer refinery in Rajasthan.
Higher refinery output could in turn support
increased exports of diesel, jet fuel and petrol, strengthening one of India's
most important export industries.
Yet even as the immediate crisis begins to
ease, former Reserve Bank of India governor Raghuram Rajan says the Hormuz
disruption should serve as a "wake-up call" about how vulnerable the
world remains to supply disruptions.
The strait is a critical artery for India's
economy, carrying a substantial share of the country's LNG, LPG and crude
imports. Speaking to ET Now, Rajan said India needs much larger petroleum
reserves to protect itself from future disruptions.
He also called for more flexible backup
options. China, he noted, has shown it can rapidly increase coal production
during supply crises. India needs similar contingency plans while continuing
its longer-term shift toward renewable energy.
But Rajan cautions that renewable energy brings
vulnerabilities of its own because India remains heavily dependent on imported
solar cells, panels and wind power components.
The wider lesson is that India cannot afford to
depend too heavily on any single supplier, trade route or commodity, and that
warning extends beyond energy.
Policymakers and industry leaders need to build
strategic buffers for other critical imports, such as pharmaceutical raw
materials, Rajan notes. The bulk of the basic ingredients used by India's
pharmaceutical industry come from China.