There
were two key reasons for the significant savings – lower average cost of India’s crude oil imports in
2023-24 compared to 2022-23, and purchase of highly discounted Russian oil,
experts said.
The value of savings in Indian currency was
about ₹1.64 lakh crore. India imported crude oil worth over ₹12.60
lakh crore in 2022-23 and ₹10.97 lakh crore in 2023-24. It imported more
than 87% crude oil paid in dollars.
India’s
average cost of various types of crude oil imports, called the Indian basket,
in 2023-24 was $82.58 a barrel, $10.57 a barrel less than $93.15 per barrel in
the preceding fiscal year, according to provisional data. The composition of the Indian basket represents an
average of Oman and Dubai for sour grades, and Brent for sweet grade.
Imports of petroleum products also saw a dip in terms
of value from $28.2 billion in 2022-23 to $25.1 billion in 2023-24. Imports of
petroleum products include LPG, naphtha, bitumen and fuel oil.
Gross imports, which include both crude oil and
petroleum products, also saw a declining trend in value terms, even as import
quantities increased. While 277.3 MT of gross petroleum imports in 2022-23 were
worth $184.4 billion, gross import in 2023-24 was 280.5 MT worth $155.8
billion.
India, one of the global crude oil refining hubs,
exported products worth $47.4 billion (62.2 MT) of total quantities to Africa
and Europe in 2023-24 compared to $57.3 billion (61 MT) in 2022-23. With total
installed refining capacity of 256.8 million metric tonne per annum (MMTPA),
India processed 261.5 MT in 2023-24, which was more than the target for 2023-24
(251.7) and output of 2022-23 (255.2 MT).
India
has about two dozen refineries owned and operated by both public and private
companies. Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and
Hindustan Petroleum are the three large state-run refineries. Private refiners
are operated by Reliance Industries and Nayara Energy. HPCL-Mittal Energy is a
joint venture Hindustan Petroleum and the LN Mittal group.