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Sources say India has extended the deadline for its first annual US LPG tender until October 17,

The Indian state refiners extended the deadline for the first joint long-term bid for the import of liquefied petrol gas (LPG), from the United States, in 2026 for one week. This was announced on Thursday by trade sources.

India is planning to increase energy imports from America to reduce its trade surplus, which is a major irritation for President Donald Trump.

India's increased energy purchases from the U.S. could help prospects for a trade agreement between the two nations and New Delhi avoid the hefty tariffs that Trump imposed on its products.

LPG, a mixture of butane and propane used for cooking fuel, is imported mainly by state retailers Indian Oil Corp. Bharat Petroleum Corp. and Hindustan Petroleum Corp. and sold to households at a subsidised rate.

Sources said that the three refiners, in their joint bid, are looking to deliver 48 large gas carriers or 2 million metric tonnes of LPG by 2026.

Requests for comments were not immediately responded to by the companies.

The award of the tender would reduce India's LPG imports from Middle East suppliers and help India diversify its fuel sources, according to the experts.

Saudi Aramco, a major Middle East producer, has already reduced the official price of propane to $495 per ton by $25. By $15 per ton, to $475 per tonne Butane

In July, it was reported that India intends to import about 10% of cooking gas from the U.S. starting in 2026.

Middle Eastern LPG producers are the main suppliers of LPG to the world's third largest oil importer. In 2024, more than 90% its 20.5 million metric tonnes of imports will come from this region.

(source: Reuters)