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India's HPCL explores Russian alternative oil amid price and sanction worries

Vikas Kaushal, chairman of Hindustan Petroleum Corp in India, said that the company is looking for alternatives to Russian crude oil if they were to stop purchasing it due to rising prices and sanctions.

Indian refiners stopped buying Russian oil because it was becoming too expensive. President Donald Trump has threatened to penalize the South Asian nation if they continue to buy Russian oil.

Trump imposed an additional 25% tariff to Indian goods citing New Delhi’s continued imports from Russia. This move escalated tensions after trade talks between the two countries reached a standstill.

Kaushal stated that HPCL's Russian Oil intake for the quarter ending June fell by 13.2% as a result of narrowing discounts, despite the fact that there was no official government directive regarding the purchase.

It's not for any geopolitical reasons. Kaushal said in an analyst call that it was an economic choice based on the fuel we needed to operate our refineries.

HPCL is still willing to buy Russian oil, if the price drops. The company will absorb any financial losses incurred by not processing Russian crude oil, as they have already reduced their Russian oil processing.

HPCL controls directly 490,000 barrels of refining capacity per day. It also has a stake with the private refiner HPCL Mittal Energy Ltd., which operates a plant that produces 226,000 barrels per days in northern India.

The company is also constructing a 180,000-bpd refinery in Barmer, a desert state in Rajasthan.

HPCL has diversified its crude supplier base and simplified its crude import strategy by sourcing 4,000,000 barrels via a single bid instead of multiple offers.

(source: Reuters)