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Reliance India would buy Venezuelan oil, if permitted

Reliance Industries, India's operator of the largest refinery complex in the world, announced?on Friday that it would buy Venezuelan oil, if allowed to be sold to non-U.S. customers.

In an email response to queries, a Reliance Industries spokesperson said: "We are waiting for clarity on the access of Venezuelan oil by buyers outside the United States and will consider purchasing oil in a compliance manner."

Industry sources say that state-run refiners Indian Oil Corp. and Hindustan Petroleum Corp. will also buy Venezuelan oil, if the sale of Venezuelan crude is allowed to companies outside the United States.

Both companies did not respond immediately to requests for comment.

RELIANCE STOPPED BUYING VENEZUELANOIL LAST YEAR

Caracas reached an agreement with Washington this week for the export of up to $2 billion in Venezuelan crude oil, or 30-50 million barrels to the United States after U.S. forces captured President Nicolas Maduro, on January 3.

Reliance stopped purchasing Venezuelan oil in March 2025, after President Donald Trump announced that a 25% tariff would be applied to nations who bought crude from the South American producer. Conglomerate received last Venezuelan oil shipment in May of last year.

Reliance has two refinery facilities in the western Gujarat state with a combined crude oil capacity of 1.4 million barrels a day. This allows it to process heavier and cheaper crudes like Venezuela's Merey.

Sumit Ritola is a lead research analyst at Kpler, specializing in refining and modeling.

A COMFORTABLE ALTERNATIVE FOR 'RUSSIAN ENERGY'

LSEG's trade flows reveal that India's HPCL Mittal Energy, Nayara Energy IOC and Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals imported Venezuelan crude oil in the past.

Ritola stated that Venezuelan oil was a "politically acceptable diversification option" for India in comparison to Russian oil.

India is under pressure from the West to reduce its Russian oil purchases following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, as they are concerned that oil revenues may be used to fund Russia's war efforts.

Last year, the United States doubled tariffs against Indian goods from 25% to 50% citing India's "heavy purchase of Russian crude".

On Wednesday, a Republican Senator claimed that Trump has 'greenlit?legislation to sanction countries doing business in Russia.

Reliance, however, has said that it will not be receiving Russian oil this January. India's Russian imports could be drastically reduced by the decision.

Ritola stated, "We have already seen Reliance reduce its intake of Russian oil. This shows refiners can adapt to new risks or compliance issues." (Reporting and Editing by Louise Heavens, Bernadettebaum, and Nidhi verma)

(source: Reuters)