In the past week, Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL), India's largest private refiner, has bought several shipments of crude oil from the Middle East. This might mean that the business is changing the way it gets its oil. The West is paying more attention to India's continued import of cheap Russian barrels since 2022.
This increase in purchases is interesting because RIL has been one of India's biggest buyers of Russian crude oil for a long time. They have been able to get "Urals" and other Russian grades for less money as a result of changes in global sanctions and market conditions.
The question remains: Is Reliance making changes to ensure long-term stability or just responding to short-term diplomatic problems as geopolitical pressure rises and global oil markets change?
Reliance recently bought several shipments of Basrah Medium, Al-Shaheen, and Qatar Land crude grades from suppliers in West Asia.
RIL, which operates the world's largest refining complex in Jamnagar, was once the biggest buyer of Russia's Urals crude. They did this by taking advantage of discounts that came after Western sanctions.
But the latest purchase suggests that those flows are slowing down. Analysts think this move could reflect that:
The latest purchase of Middle Eastern crude by Reliance Industries Ltd suggests that flows of Russian oil to India may be slowing down. This shows that the shift is getting stronger.
In addition, the discounts on Russian crude have gone down a lot. For instance, Russian Urals crude sent to India is now trading for only $2 to $2.50 less per barrel than dated Brent for November loading. Earlier in the war, the discount was $20 to $25 per barrel.
There is more flexibility in operations and feedstock. Indian refiners like Reliance may be changing the types of crude oil they buy and the mix of crude oil they buy in order to get better yields from their refineries, lower the risk of sanctions, and make sure that exports continue.
Together, these factors suggest that the move towards Middle Eastern crude isn’t just opportunistic - it could be a more strategic pivot in response to both cost pressures and geopolitical risk.
The pivot points towards a larger context: Western governments have been working more closely with New Delhi and telling Indian refiners to stop using Russian barrels.
These changes suggest that supply sources are starting to shift, balancing economic reality with global political reality.
From a business point of view, Reliance's change could be a sign of strategic hedging:
This change also comes with short-term risks, such as lower refining margins and a greater need for working capital.
The way India buys energy is slowly but noticeably changing.
Reliance's most recent purchases of crude oil show how India's energy strategy is becoming more and more an intersection of market economics and geopolitics. What looks like a small change in strategy may actually be the beginning of a larger structural diversification. This is meant to lower the risk of sanctions, make freight markets tighter, and deal with possible supply problems.
Changing some of its intake to Middle Eastern grades could help improve refining margins as Russian discounts change and product demand changes in export markets like Europe and Africa.
The question that investors and policymakers pose is: Will Reliance's shift make energy more stable in the long term, or will it hurt the cost benefits that made Russian crude so profitable?
References
The Economic Times
Business Standard
Hindustan Times
Reuters
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