India's daily crude oil imports from its top supplier Russia are expected to rise in February from the previous month, helped by resumption of the light sweet Sokol grade, preliminary ship tracking data showed.
However, India's Russian oil imports are expected to slow in the coming months as the United States steps up shipping sanctions, forcing refiners to look for alternatives.
Click here to follow our WhatsApp channel
The latest sanctions target Russia's leading tanker group Sovcomflot, which Washington accuses of being involved in violating the G7 price cap, as well as 14 tankers tied to the shipping company.
Discounts on Russian oil, which have already declined to around $3.5-$4 per barrel, are also expected to fall further as sanctions are seen as driving up freight costs.
India's Russian oil imports rose to about 1.46 million barrels per day in February, which ship tracking firm Kpler put at a 7.6% increase from the previous month while data provided by Vortexa indicated a 11.7% rise.
The world's third-largest oil importer and consumer also increased imports of Saudi Arabian grades but reduced intake of Iraqi oil, according to the data.
Vortexa analyst Emma Li said Indian refiners had not bought the Sokol grade in December and January due to payment issues, with the resumption driving February's rise in Russian imports.
India last year emerged as a top buyer of sea-borne Russian oil sold at a discount after Western countries halted imports following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.
Also Read
'Edible oil imports down 16% to 1.30 mn tonnes on lower palm oil shipments'
India's vegetable oil imports up 16% at 16.71 mn tonnes in 2022-23 oil year
Sunflower oil imports to falter as Red Sea attacks lift freight costs
India's oil imports from Russia rebound in November on Diwali demand
India loosening its planned restrictions on laptop, tablet imports
Key infra sectors' growth slows to 15-month low of 3.6% in January
Fiscal deficit at Jan-end touches 63.6% of full year target: Govt data
India looks elsewhere for oil as latest US sanctions crimp Russia trade
WTO meeting: India, SA oppose China-led investment facilitation proposal
Govt sets wheat procurement target of 30-32 mn tonnes for 2024-25 season
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)