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Kremlin: India's decline in Russian oil imports could be temporary

Dmitry Peskov, Kremlin spokesperson on Tuesday, told Indian journalists that the decline in India's imports of Russian oil may only last for a "brief period", as Moscow intends to increase supplies to New Delhi.

India, which is the largest buyer of Russian oil by sea, has reduced its crude imports to Moscow due to Western sanctions. India is the third largest oil consumer and importer in the world. Russia is its top oil supplier. This month, India is expected to reduce its Russian oil imports to a minimum of a three-year high after Washington sanctions Moscow's largest oil producers Rosneft & Lukoil.

Peskov, an Indian journalist, told Indian journalists in an online briefing Tuesday, just days before President Vladimir Putin's visit to India to hold summit talks with Prime Minster Narendra Modi.

He said that trade mechanisms which could not be affected by a third country were needed. Russia had experience with doing business under sanctions.

Indian refiners such as Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals Ltd., Hindustan Petroleum Corp., and HPCL-Mittal Energy Ltd. have stopped purchasing Russian oil. Indian Oil Corp, the state-run oil company, has placed orders for non-sanctioned companies to purchase Russian oil. Bharat Petroleum Corp's negotiations with Russia are in a very advanced stage. After British and EU sanctions, the Russian-backed Indian refiner Nayara Energy (partly owned by Rosneft) is processing only Russian oil. Russia wants India continue to support Nayara in order to boost local sales and capacity usage.

Reliance Industries Ltd., formerly the largest Indian oil client to Russia, said that it had loaded Russian oil cargoes as "precommitted", starting on October 22. It will also process any parcels arriving after November 20, at its refinery, which is designed to produce fuels specifically for the Indian market.

(source: Reuters)