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Chairman of India's BPCL says that the company reviews its oil imports every day and buys more on the spot amid Iran War.

Bharat Petroleum Corporation, India's state refiner. Sanjay Khanna, the chairman of Bharat Petroleum?Corp. said on Tuesday that it is recalibrating their crude import strategy nearly daily and ramping up its spot purchases following the U.S./Israeli conflict against Iran which disrupted Middle East supplies. India, which is the third-largest oil importer and consumer in the world, has been affected by the rising prices of crude and the disruption of supply following the closing of the Strait of Hormuz. South Asian nation raised retail petrol and diesel prices twice in one week.

BPCL planned to procure about 55% its crude requirements?for 2026/27 via annual contracts mainly from Middle Eastern suppliers, and the remainder through spot markets.

Khanna stated that BPCL has been forced to increase its spot purchases by Gulf suppliers to maintain refineries at a?115% level of capacity.

Our spot volume has increased significantly in recent years because of the uncertainty.

BPCL has three?refineries that can process up to 706,000 barrels of oil per day. Khanna stated that the'state-run refiner' meets 40-45 percent of its crude oil needs by buying Russian oil primarily on the spot market, after Washington lifted sanctions. Discounts have also narrowed dramatically.

Finance director Vetsa RAMAKRISHNA GUPTA said that discounts on Russian crude are now $5 to $6 per barrelle compared to Brent dated on a delivery basis, down from $10 to 12 earlier.

Gupta stated that despite recent fuel price increases, BPCL still suffers a loss in revenue of between 25 and 30 rupees (26-31 U.S. Cents) per litre for diesel, and between 10 to 14 rupees a litre for petrol.

BPCL anticipates that spot purchases will ease if Saudi Arabian contracted'supplies' improve following the restoration of the Kingdom’s east-west pipe capacity.

Gupta stated that Saudi Arabia currently gives only "a small amount of commitment" to supply through the pipeline.

BPCL is also evaluating new annual supply agreements with producers for the next?year if these offer flexible delivery terms, competitive pricing and the company prefers to source from local regions rather than distant suppliers - such as Venezuela and Canada.

The refiner has an annual option crude purchase agreement with Brazil. BPCL announced earlier on Tuesday that its fourth-quarter profit, before special items and taxes, rose 42.6% to 86.07 trillion rupees ($892 millions), thanks to steady fuel demand.

(source: Reuters)