1. Introduction
Think of India’s oil imports as a high-stakes dance. For the past several years, Russia has been the lead partner. But now, glancing over Russia’s shoulder, is a former dance partner making a bold return to the floor. The United States, after a long hiatus, is back and bringing substantial volumes to the party. This rekindled energy relationship is reshaping the rhythm of global politics. Join us as we trace the steps that brought the US back into India’s orbit, weigh the strategic advantages of this new partnership, and ask what music will play next.
2. The Continuing Dominance of Russia
2.1 Russia’s Rise as India’s Top Supplier
Russia’s ascendancy in India’s oil imports has been remarkable. Traditionally, Middle Eastern nations dominated India’s crude‐oil imports. However, in recent years, Russia has overtaken many competitors. For example, in fiscal year 2024-25 India imported an average of about 1.76 million barrels per day (bpd) of Russian crude, representing roughly 36 % of India’s total oil imports.
Data also indicates that for months in 2025, Russia accounted for about one‐third or more of India’s crude imports.
2.2 Why Russia Gained Market Share
Several factors contributed to this shift:
- Russia, facing reduced demand from Europe after the war in Ukraine and sanctions, offered discounted crude and favourable terms.
- India’s refiners, including both public and private entities, were able to lock in competitively priced Russian crude even with longer shipping distances.
- Strategic ties between India and Russia, long‐standing in defence and energy, provided comfort for importers in India to work with Russian suppliers even as other markets tightened.
2.3 The Risks in Heavy Dependence
While the arrangement has brought cost savings and enhanced access to crude supplies, it carries important risks:
- Exposure to international sanctions: With major Russian oil producers such as Rosneft and Lukoil subject to sanctions, Indian refiners face logistics, banking and shipping complications.
- Concentration risk: A large share of imports from a single country heightens vulnerability to supply disruptions, geopolitical shifts, and cartel behaviour.
- Longer shipping routes and associated costs: Although discounting helps, longer voyages raise insurance, freight and risk costs.
Thus, while Russia continues to lead India’s oil basket, Indian refiners and policymakers are keenly aware of the need for diversification.
3. The U.S. Surge: After Four Years, A New Player Floods India’s Oil Basket
3.1 U.S. Crude to India—The Numbers
After a four-year dry spell, American oil is gushing back into India’s market. This past October, U.S. crude shipments to India hit a staggering 568,000 barrels per day—a high not seen since March 2021. This torrent of American oil didn’t just trickle in; it made up a full 12% of India’s entire crude imports for the month, marking a serious comeback.
3.2 Why the U.S. Is Flooding India’s Oil Basket
This re‐entry of U.S. crude into India’s import mix is driven by several key reasons:
- Diversification imperative: With Russia’s dominance and Western sanctions creating uncertainty, India’s refiners are actively seeking alternative sources.
- Quality and refinery‐blend compatibility: U.S. crude often comes in lighter, sweeter grades, which blend well with heavier Middle Eastern or Russian barrels and help improve refinery margins.
- Geopolitical leverage: The U.S. has been pushing for increased energy trade with India, offering alternative supply chains in exchange for deeper strategic ties. India’s imports from the U.S. strengthen its bargaining position amid global energy shifts.
- Pricing and logistics window: With global supply‐chain changes, some U.S. barrels may become competitive, especially when factoring in shipping routes, hedge strategies, and Indian refiners’ blending flexibility.
3.3 The Meaning of “After Four Years”
The reference to “after four years” underscores that India had limited imports from the U.S. in recent years, with the uptick only recently gaining traction. A figure of 568,000 bpd in October 2025 represents a meaningful re‐entry of U.S. crude into India’s import basket. This suggests that refiners and importers are actively recalibrating their strategies.
4. India’s Broader Shift in Crude Imports & Strategy
4.1 Declining Role of OPEC/Middle East
With Russia and the U.S. becoming more prominent in India’s mix, traditional Middle Eastern suppliers from Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) have seen their share drop. For instance, data shows that in FY 2024-25 the OPEC share of India’s imports fell to a record low of around 48.5 % as Russia’s share increased.
Iraq and Saudi Arabia, historically large suppliers to India, have witnessed declines: Saudi Arabia’s shipments to India in 2024-25 fell to their lowest in 14 years, while Iraq’s imports dropped to a four-year low.
4.2 India’s Import Volumes & Dependence
India remains heavily reliant on imported crude. According to data, the country imports around 4.7 to 5 million bpd of crude oil—over 85% of its requirement.
Given this dependence, sourcing strategies—both economic and strategic—are critically important for India’s energy security and macro‐economic stability.
4.3 The Diversification Playbook
Indian refiners and policymakers are increasingly focused on:
- Supplier diversification – Broadening the pool of exporting countries (e.g., U.S., Latin America, West Africa) to reduce concentration risk.
- Grade diversification – Mixing heavy and light crude grades to optimize refinery throughput, margins and product slate.
- Logistics & shipping innovation – Including adjusting shipping routes, storage strategies and hedging freight risk given varying distances from suppliers.
- Geopolitical hedging – Balancing Indian energy ties between Russia, the Middle East, the U.S. and other emerging suppliers while considering trade and strategic partnerships.
5. Implications for India’s Energy Security and Geopolitics
5.1 Cost & Margin Impact
Importing discounted Russian crude has helped India’s refiners achieve favourable economics. But an increased share of U.S. and diversified supplies may affect cost structures: U.S. barrels may be priced differently and shipping distances may vary. Indian refiners will need to manage blending margins carefully.
5.2 Geopolitical & Trade Fallout
India’s persistent Russian imports have drawn international attention. For example:
- India’s import of Russian crude prompted U.S. pressure and potential trade repercussions.
- Shifting imports to the U.S. gives India more strategic flexibility and may ease some geopolitical friction around Russian purchases.
5.3 Refinery & Infrastructure Impact
Indian refining complexes, especially in western India (like Gujarat), benefit from proximate shipping routes from Russia and the U.S. Increased U.S. crude in the mix may prompt refiners to adjust feed‐stock configurations, invest in handling lighter grades, and optimize transport logistics (rail/port/jetties).
5.4 Climate and Energy Transition Considerations
While crude imports remain critical today, the long‐term transition to cleaner energy means India must balance import strategy with domestic / renewable energy policies. Diversified supply chains reduce vulnerability during transition shocks and help India manage the risks of stranded assets or supply‐side shocks in fossil fuels.
6. Outlook: What to Watch For
6.1 Will Russia’s Share Decline?
Recent sanctions on Rosneft and Lukoil are prompting some Indian refiners to reconsider direct imports. While a full exit seems unlikely in the short term (given price advantage and alignment with India’s energy needs), one could anticipate a gradual tapering or more indirect sourcing of Russian barrels via intermediaries.
6.2 Will the U.S. Share Continue Rising?
If U.S. crude remains competitively priced and Indian refiners adapt their logistics, the U.S. share in India’s oil basket could expand further. Analysts suggest that the October 2025 figure (12 %) may grow as refiners and importers adjust to supply‐chain opportunities.
6.3 New Players and Regions Gaining Traction
India is also eyeing Latin American, West African and even South American suppliers as part of its diversification strategy. Long shipping distances, infrastructure constraints and quality/grade compatibility remain hurdles, but they represent long‐term opportunity.
6.4 Refiners’ Strategic Moves
Indian refiners will need to revisit supplier contracts, storage and blending practices, shipping and insurance logistics, and risk management (including sanctions risk). Bigger refineries may lock in long‐term deals with U.S. suppliers or others to hedge their exposure.
6.5 Domestic Policy & Strategic Buffering
India won’t leave its energy security to chance. The game plan is clear: rapidly expand strategic fuel stockpiles, modernize refineries to become versatile “all-terrain” processors for diverse crude types, and turbocharge homegrown exploration efforts. Simultaneously, the diplomatic corps will be tasked with locking down reliable deals with a broader mix of producer nations, ensuring the nation’s lifeline remains secure.