Shashwat Kumar
For most of 2025, the Trump administration pressured India to curb Russian crude imports. It sanctioned Rosneft and Lukoil—Russia’s largest oil firms—and imposed a 25 percent punitive tariff on all Indian exports to the United States. The escalating Middle East conflict—including Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and strikes on Gulf refineries—now challenge India’s strategy of diversification. India’s traditional Gulf oil suppliers who could have replaced Russian crude are under attack, and supplies from Venezuela remain too low to offset major disruptions. Amid uncertainty, Russian crude oil flows to India might endure, not by choice, but by necessity.
It is too early to speculate whether Russian oil exports to India will surge. Washington’s March 5 waiver aids continuity, but sanctions persist. However, larger energy security concerns raise a key question: Can India afford to cut Russian reliance further from current levels (around 20–22 percent) amid turmoil in other major oil-producing regions? Pragmatism suggests it won’t be an easy decision to make for Indian policymakers.