India’s Russian oil imports at six-month high in Nov.

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India's Russian Oil Imports at Six-Month High in November 2025


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year/Period Milestone
Feb 2022 Russia invades Ukraine; Western nations impose sanctions on Russian energy
Mid-2022 India begins sharply scaling up discounted Russian crude purchases
2023 Russia displaces Iraq and Saudi Arabia as India's #1 crude supplier
2024 Russia's share stabilises at ~35–36% of India's crude imports [S2]
Jan–Oct 2025 India's Russian oil imports down 18% YoY; US imports surge 83% YoY in value [S3]
June 2025 Russian crude imports hit 11-month high (2.08 mn bpd) [S4]
July 2025 Russian imports slump to ~1.5 mn bpd (lowest since Feb 2025) [S4]
Aug 2025 U.S. raises tariffs on India from 25% → 50% citing Russian oil purchases [S1]
Nov 2025 Russian imports rebound to six-month high (7.7 MT / $3.7 bn) [S1]
Since Feb 2022 India imported €144 billion worth of Russian oil cumulatively (CREA data) [S5]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India imported 7.7 million tonnes of Russian crude oil in November 2025, the highest since May 2025. [S1]
  2. Russia accounted for 35.1% of India's total crude oil imports by volume in November 2025. [S1]
  3. In value terms, India's Russian oil imports in November 2025 stood at $3.7 billion, constituting 34% of its total oil import bill. [S1]
  4. The U.S. and Russia together accounted for ~50% of India's total oil imports in November 2025. [S1]
  5. The U.S. raised tariffs on India from 25% to 50% in August 2025 citing India's Russian oil imports. [S1]
  6. In 7 of the 8 months preceding the U.S. tariff hike (Aug 2025), India had actually cut Russian oil imports on a YoY basis. [S1]
  7. India's Jan–Oct 2025 Russian oil imports were 18% lower YoY in volume, while US imports surged 83% YoY in value. [S3]
  8. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine (February 2022), India has imported crude worth €144 billion from Russia (CREA estimate). [S5]
  9. The Ministry of Commerce and Industry (not Ministry of Petroleum) is the agency that publishes India's crude oil import data. [S1]
  10. India slipped to third among global buyers of Russian crude oil in early 2026, behind China. [S6]
  11. Nayara Energy — a major Indian refiner — is partially owned by Russia's Rosneft, creating structural dependence on Russian crude.
  12. Russian crude imports reached an 11-month high in June 2025 (~2.08 mn bpd), then fell to a low in July 2025 (~1.5 mn bpd). [S4]
  13. Russia displaced Iraq as India's single largest crude oil supplier from 2023 onwards. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-II: India's foreign policy; bilateral relations (India-Russia, India-US); impact of international policies on India's interests. - GS-III: Indian economy — energy security, trade policy, current account deficit, infrastructure.

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests" - GS-III: "Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads"; "Indian Economy and issues relating to Planning, Mobilization of Resources"

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "India's continued import of Russian crude oil reflects a careful balancing act between energy security and strategic partnerships. Critically examine the geopolitical and economic implications of this dependence." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "The United States' use of tariff policy as leverage against India's energy choices raises fundamental questions about the limits of economic coercion in inter-state relations. Discuss." (GS-II, 15 marks) 3. "Energy security is the cornerstone of economic sovereignty. In light of India's increasing reliance on Russian crude oil, evaluate the trade-offs between discounted energy access and diplomatic vulnerability." (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India-Russia Bilateral Relations Foundational context for understanding why India resists sanctions pressure; S-400, defence ties, VOSTOK exercises
India-US Trade Relations & Tariff Disputes The tariff hike from 25%→50% is a live pressure point; links to WTO dispute settlement
India's Energy Security Policy Diversification strategy: Russian + US + Middle East + Africa crude mix
Western Sanctions Regime (Russia) OFAC, EU oil price cap ($60/barrel on Russian Urals), G7 sanctions architecture
India's Current Account Deficit (CAD) Oil imports are the single largest component of India's trade deficit
Petroleum Sector Regulation in India PNGRB Act 2006, role of PSU refiners (IOC, BPCL, HPCL), strategic petroleum reserves
India's NDCs & Net-Zero Commitments Tension between fossil fuel import growth and climate pledges under Paris Agreement
BRICS & SCO Energy Cooperation Multilateral frameworks under which India-Russia energy trade is diplomatically embedded

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry for trade data: The data on oil imports is published by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, NOT the Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (which sets policy). Confusing the two is a common trap. [S1]
  2. Conflating volume and value shares: Russia's share was 35.1% by volume but 34% by value in November 2025 — a slight difference due to price per unit. Examiners may test this distinction. [S1]
  3. Assuming Indian imports violated international law: Western sanctions (OFAC/EU) on Russian oil are unilateral, not UN Security Council mandated — they have no binding force on India. India has broken no international legal obligation.
  4. Confusing the direction of the 2025 trend: Most of 2025 saw India reducing Russian imports (down 18% Jan–Oct), but November saw a rebound. The headline "six-month high" must be read against this trend — aspirants often miss the nuance.
  5. Attributing India's diversification solely to U.S. pressure: India was already diversifying (US imports up 83%) before the August 2025 tariff hike — the causal arrow is not simple.

11. Sources