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Sources say that India's Russian oil binge will end in December, as sanctions bite.

India's Russian crude oil imports will be at their lowest level in three years by December. They were already higher than they had been for several months in November as refiners sought alternatives to avoid violating Western sanctions.

The United States, Britain and the European Union have all tightened sanctions against Moscow in response to the conflict in Ukraine. Washington's most recent measures target top Russian oil producers Rosneft, and Lukoil.

The deadline for buyers of Russian oil to end their dealings with these two companies was November 21.

Separately the EU set a deadline of 21 January after which it would refuse fuel from refineries who handled Russian crude in the 60 days following the bill of loading.

BANK SCRUTINY LEADS BANK CAUTION

One of the sources in the refinery industry said that the recent U.S. sanction has caused Indian refiners to be "extremely careful" after the scrutiny of banks. India will likely receive 600,000 - 650,000 barrels of Russian oil per day by December.

Source: These include imports from Indian Oil Corp., Nayara Energy, and the delivery of certain November-loading cargoes to Reliance Industries. The source cited preliminary lifting plans by Indian companies.

Kpler's preliminary data showed that India will receive 1,87 million bpd in Russian crude this month. Data from trade sources show that in October, India imported 1.65 millions bpd more Russian oil than it did in September.

A trade source said that "Russian supplies are expected to be very high in November, as many refineries have been trying to fill their stocks before the U.S. sanction deadline. This is also due to a rule that will allow oil products to be produced for the EU market using non-Russian crude oil starting 2026."

Sources requested anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak with media.

MOST INDIAN REFINERS STOP RUSSIAN BUYS

The majority of Indian refiners such as Hindustan Petroleum Corp, HPCL-Mittal Energy Ltd and Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals Ltd have stopped purchasing Russian oil.

Indian Oil Corp. and Bharat Petrol Corp., both state-owned companies, have announced that they will only buy from non-sanctioned parties.

Nayara Energy, a company owned in part by Rosneft and exclusively processing Russian oil, has been the sole supplier of Russian crude after other suppliers withdrew following British sanctions and EU sanctions.

Reliance Industries Ltd. has announced 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 local market.

Reliance is the operator of one of the largest refining complexes in the world. It has two refineries, with the first catering to the export market.

As refiners took advantage of an arbitrage opportunity, the share of U.S. crude oil in India's imports of oil in October soared to its highest level since June 2024.

India is also being urged to buy more U.S. Energy after Washington doubled the tariffs on Indian Imports to 50% citing New Delhi’s purchase of Russian Oil.

(source: Reuters)