US President Donald Trump’s hiked tariff announcement on Indian goods was partly stemming from his displeasure with India for continuing to buy Russian crude.
Besides the 25 per cent tariffs that he has threatened to impose on Indian exports, there may be an unspecified penalty for buying Russian oil and weapons which, analysts say, has put India in a double whammy that is “a squeeze from both ends” after the European Union also banned imports of refined products derived from Russian-origin crude.
If India – the world’s third-largest oil consumer and importer – decided to act under pressure and moves away from Russian crude, it could end up paying a heavy price, say analysts.
Following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in February, 2022, and Western sanctions on the Kremlin, India took advantage of discounted Russian crude to help reduce its overall energy import costs, keep retail fuel prices in check, and contain inflation.
From a previous less-than-0.2-per-cent imports, Russian oil now accounts for 35-40 per cent of India’s crude intake which the country also refines to extract petroleum products.
India also exports these petroleum products to countries that have imposed sanctions on direct imports from Russia, a twin strategy of Indian oil companies that has been posting record profits.
However, with the latest threats by Trump and EU sanctions that would be effective from January, 2026, Indian refiners may be forced to segment crude intake on one side and brace for secondary sanctions from the US on the other, which will directly hit the shipping, insurance, and financing lifelines underpinning India’s Russian oil trade.
Sumit Ritolia, Lead Research Analyst (Refining & Modeling) at global real-time data and analytics provider Kpler, said these measures sharply curtail India's crude procurement flexibility, raise compliance risk, and introduce significant cost uncertainty.
Last fiscal, India spent over USD 137 billion on import of crude oil, which is refined into fuels like petrol and diesel.
For refiners like Reliance Industries Ltd and Nayara Energy – who collectively account for a bulk (more than 50 per cent in 2025) of the 1.7–2.0 million barrels per day (bpd) of Russian crude imports into India – the challenge is acute.
While Nayara is backed by Russian oil giant Rosneft and has been sanctioned by the EU last month, Reliance has been a big fuel exporter to Europe.
As one of the world's largest diesel exporters – and with total refined product exports to Europe averaging around 200,000 bpd in 2024 and 185,000 bpd so far in 2025 - Reliance has extensively utilised discounted Russian crude to boost refining margins over the past two years, according to Kpler.
"The introduction of strict origin-tracking requirements now compels Reliance to either curtail its intake of Russian feedstock, potentially affecting cost competitiveness, or reroute Russian-linked products to non-EU markets," Ritolia said.
However, Reliance's dual-refinery structure - a domestic-focused unit and an export-oriented complex - offers strategic flexibility. It can allocate non-Russian crude to its export-oriented refinery and continue meeting EU compliance standards, while processing Russian barrels at the domestic unit for other markets.
Although redirecting diesel exports to Southeast Asia, Africa, or Latin America is operationally feasible, such a shift would involve narrower margins, longer voyage times, and increased demand variability, making it commercially less optimal, he said.
Kpler data shows a notable decline in India's Russian crude imports in July (1.8 million bpd versus 2.1 million bpd in June), aligning with seasonal refinery maintenance and weaker monsoon-driven demand. However, the drop is more pronounced among state-run refiners, likely reflecting heightened compliance sensitivity amid mounting geopolitical risk.
Private refiners, who account for over 50 per cent of Russian crude intake, have also begun reducing exposure, with fresh procurement diversification underway this week as concerns over US sanctions intensify.
Ritolia said replacing Russian crude isn't plug-and-play. The Middle East is the logical fallback, but has constraints - contractual lock-in, pricing rigidity, and a mismatch in crude quality that affects product yield and refinery configuration.
"The risk here is not just supply but profitability. Refiners will face higher feedstock costs, and in the case of complex units optimized for (Russian) Urals-like blends, even margins will be under pressure," he said.
On the future course, Kpler believes India's complex private refiners - backed by robust trading arms and flexible configurations - are expected to pivot toward non-Russian barrels from the Middle East, West Africa, Latin America, or even the US, where economics permits.
This shift, while operationally feasible, will be gradual and strategically aligned with evolving regulatory frameworks, contract structures, and margin dynamics.
However, replacing Russian barrels in full is no easy feat - logistically daunting, economically painful, and geopolitically fraught. Supply substitution may be feasible on paper, but remains fraught in practice.
"Financially, the implications are massive. Assuming a USD 5 per barrel discount lost across 1.8 million bpd, India could see its import bill swell by USD 9–11 billion annually. If global flat prices rise further due to reduced Russian availability, the cost could be higher," it said.
This would increase fiscal strain, particularly if the government steps in to stabilize retail fuel prices. The cascading impact on inflation, currency, and monetary policy would be difficult to ignore.