Context:
- The United States temporarily eased sanctions on Iranian crude oil already loaded on tankers for one month (March 20 – April 19, 2026).
- This has prompted Indian refiners to assess whether to resume imports of Iranian crude oil after a gap since 2019.
Key Highlights:
International Developments / Policy Change
- US issued a general license allowing transactions involving:
- Iranian oil already loaded on vessels before March 20, 2026.
- Aim: Increase global oil supply amid geopolitical tensions.
Global Oil Market Scenario
- Estimated 140–170 million barrels of Iranian oil currently “on water”.
- Strait of Hormuz disruptions due to conflict (since Feb 28, 2026):
- Affects nearly 1/5th of global oil and LNG trade.
- India imports 2.5–2.7 million barrels per day (bpd) via this route.
India’s Position
- India stopped importing Iranian oil in May 2019 due to US sanctions.
- Indian refiners are evaluating:
- Techno-commercial feasibility
- Pricing advantages
- Logistics and payment constraints
Financial and Operational Constraints
- Iran remains excluded from SWIFT, complicating payment mechanisms.
- Over 90% of Iranian oil exports currently go to China.
Stakeholders Involved
- Indian oil refiners (public & private)
- US government
- Iran and its oil sector
- Global oil markets
- Shipping and insurance sectors
Significance / Concerns
- Opportunity for India to:
- Diversify oil sources
- Access potentially cheaper crude
- Risks include:
- Geopolitical uncertainty
- Payment challenges
- Temporary nature of sanctions relief
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Sanctions:
- Economic or political penalties imposed to influence behavior of a country
- Include trade bans, financial restrictions, asset freezes
- SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication):
- Global messaging system enabling secure international financial transactions
- Exclusion limits a country’s ability to participate in global trade
- Strait of Hormuz:
- Strategic chokepoint between Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman
- Handles about 20% of global oil trade
- Frequently asked in map-based questions
- Techno-commercial feasibility:
- Assessment of viability considering both technical and economic factors
- Possible UPSC areas:
- Major global oil chokepoints
- Impact of sanctions on global trade
- India’s crude import sources
- Energy security concepts
Relevant Mains Points:
- The issue reflects India’s challenge of balancing energy security, strategic autonomy, and geopolitical alignments.
- Temporary sanctions relief offers limited flexibility but does not resolve:
- Structural payment issues
- Long-term supply stability
- Energy security concerns:
- Heavy dependence on imports (~85%)
- Vulnerability to geopolitical disruptions (e.g., Strait of Hormuz)
- Geopolitical dimension:
- India must navigate relations with:
- USA (strategic partner)
- Iran (energy & connectivity partner, e.g., Chabahar Port)
- India must navigate relations with:
- Economic considerations:
- Iranian oil may offer price advantages.
- But transaction constraints and sanctions risks reduce attractiveness.
- Linkages for UPSC:
- GS 2 (IR): India-US-Iran relations
- GS 3 (Economy): energy security, global oil markets
- GS 3 (Internal Security): maritime chokepoints and supply disruptions
Way Forward
- Diversify crude import sources (West Asia, Russia, US, Africa).
- Strengthen strategic petroleum reserves.
- Develop alternative payment mechanisms for sanctioned economies.
- Invest in renewable energy to reduce import dependence.
- Enhance maritime security in critical chokepoints.
UPSC Relevance:
- Prelims: Strait of Hormuz, SWIFT, sanctions, oil trade facts.
- Mains: India’s energy security strategy, impact of geopolitics on oil supply, balancing strategic partnerships.
