Russian oil imports, prices jump; U.S. share goes down


Russian Oil Imports, Prices Jump; U.S. Share Goes Down

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Notes


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
Pre-2022 India imported minimal Russian crude; Middle East (Iraq, Saudi Arabia) dominated the basket
Feb 2022 Russia invades Ukraine → Western sanctions → Russia offers deep discounts on Urals crude
Mar–Sep 2022 India rapidly scales up Russian crude imports; becomes top buyer of seaborne Russian crude
2023–2024 Russia's share stabilises at ~35–40% of India's total crude basket by volume
Jan–Oct 2025 Russian crude imports down 17.8% in value ($37.1 billion); US imports up 83.3% ($7.8 billion); Russia's value-share drops to ~32% [S2]
Jan 2026 Indian imports of Russian crude decline to 1.1 mb/d — lowest since November 2022 — due to EU product-import restrictions and US pressure [S1]
April 2026 Russia's value-share rebounds to ~38% (11-month high); Russia switches from discount to premium pricing (425% premium jump) [S4]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Administrative / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Russia's share in India's crude imports (April 2026) by volume: ~34.3% (approximately 67 lakh tonnes).
  2. Russia's share in India's crude imports (April 2026) by value: ~38% — an 11-month high.
  3. U.S. crude share in April 2026: 3.8% by volume — an 8-month low.
  4. India's total oil import bill in April 2026: $15.4 billion — up 61.3% from March 2026.
  5. India's total oil imports (April 2026): 195.3 lakh tonnes (March 2026: 158.5 lakh tonnes).
  6. Russia's pricing shift (April 2026): 425% jump in premium — Russia was previously offering discounts; it is now charging a premium.
  7. Source of trade data: Ministry of Commerce and Industry (not Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas).
  8. India became the top buyer of Russian seaborne crude after Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
  9. India's Russian crude imports fell to 1.1 mb/d in January 2026 — lowest since November 2022.
  10. EU ban effective January 2026: EU banned import of petroleum products refined from Russian crude, affecting Indian refiners' export options.
  11. In Jan–Oct 2025: Russia's crude imports by India fell 17.8% in value; US imports rose 83.3% in value.
  12. India is the world's 3rd largest oil importer and consumer.
  13. India's Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR) capacity: ~5.33 million tonnes across Visakhapatnam, Mangaluru, and Padur.
  14. West Asia conflict context (2026): Iran-Israel hostilities acted as the trigger for renewed increase in Russian crude imports in April 2026.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: Primarily GS-III (Energy Security, Import Dependence, Economic Impact); secondary GS-II (India's foreign policy, India-Russia-US triangle).

Syllabus headings: - GS-III: "Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways" → specifically energy security and import dependence - GS-II: "India and its neighbourhood — bilateral, regional and global groupings"; "Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests"

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's dependence on Russian crude oil has shifted from a strategic windfall to a commercial liability. Critically examine in the context of recent developments in pricing and sanctions." 2. "Analyse the impact of the West Asia conflict and the Russia-Ukraine war on India's energy security. What structural reforms does India need to reduce crude oil import vulnerability?" 3. "Examine the geopolitical and economic implications of India's crude oil import diversification policy, with reference to India-Russia and India-US energy relations (2022–2026)."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India's Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR) Buffer mechanism against import disruptions; directly linked to crude dependence
India-Russia Bilateral Relations (post-2022) Oil trade is the economic bedrock of the current relationship
India-US Energy Diplomacy US pressure on India to reduce Russian oil; US crude as alternative
West Asia Conflict & India's Oil Security Supply disruptions directly affect India's crude import basket
India's NDCs and Energy Transition Fossil fuel dependence conflicts with climate commitments
OPEC+ and Global Oil Pricing OPEC+ decisions determine price floor/ceiling for India's import bill
Current Account Deficit (CAD) Oil is India's single largest import item; price spikes directly widen CAD
EU Sanctions on Russia (Energy) EU's January 2026 product ban cascades into Indian refinery export constraints

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry for trade data: Aspirants often attribute oil import statistics to the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas — the trade data (volume/value) comes from the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
  2. Confusing value-share with volume-share: Russia's value-share (~38%) and volume-share (~34.3%) in April 2026 are different — questions may test either; price premium explains the gap.
  3. Assuming Russian oil is still discounted (2026): A key recent development is the reversal from discount to premium — a 425% premium jump. Using outdated "Russia offers discounts" framing would be wrong for 2026.
  4. Confusing India's SPR locations: Three SPR sites are Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh), Mangaluru (Karnataka), and Padur (Karnataka) — not Maharashtra or Gujarat.
  5. Overstating US crude's role in 2026: While US imports surged in 2025, by April 2026 US share had dropped to 3.8% (8-month low) — aspirants may conflate the 2025 surge with the 2026 position.

11. Sources