Venezuelan crude oil
may start flowing to India from next month after three years as domestic
refiners are moving away from Russia to more economical energy imports after
sanction-hit Moscow drastically reduced discounts to around $2 a barrel, three
people aware of the development said.
In contrast, Venezuelan crude can be bought with
effective discounts of around $8-10 per barrel after the US eased sanctions
against the country mid-October, they said, requesting anonymity. Discounts are generally with reference to the
benchmark Brent crude, which fell about 1% to $78.56 a barrel on Friday. The
downward trend continued on Monday as Brent fell by 0.22% at $78.39 in morning
trade.
India’s imports from
Venezuela surged to $11,729.89 billion in 2014-15, mainly on purchase of crude
oil, according to data submitted in the Lok Sabha on July 31, 2017. The imports
subsequently fell to $5,701.81 billion in 2015-16 because of a steep decline in
global crude oil prices. Average crude oil import price of the country (the
Indian basket), which was $86.14 a barrel in 2014-15, dipped to $46.17 in
2015-16, an over 46% fall.
Due to heavy discounts, refiners will prefer
Venezuelan crude compared to Russian crude, which once rose to one-third of the
Indian basket from about 0.2% in 2022-23, the people said. Russia contributed over 35% of India’s total
crude imports in 2023, amounting to 1.7 million barrels per day.
In December, Indian
imports of Russian crude oil averaged 1.43 million barrels per day, reflecting
a decrease of 150,000 barrels per day compared with November, and a significant
drop of 620,000 barrels per day from the peak in May, which marked India’s
highest monthly imports from Russia.