Bharat Petroleum Corp. will consider purchasing Russian oil under long-term contracts as India strengthens its relationship with the OPEC+ producer.
India’s second-biggest state-run refiner would assess long-term arrangements with Russia when it starts negotiating with producers this month for contractual supplies, stated a BPCL official who
asked not to be identified as the information is private. The official spoke on the sidelines of India Energy Week. The South Asian nation has turned a key outlet for Russian crude since the invasion of Ukraine almost a year ago, processing the oil into fuels that have been shipped to Europe and the US. BPCL currently buys Russian oil on a one-off spot basis. It doesn’t have any long-term deals and will be negotiating supply for April to March 2024.
Russian crude has the potential to make up 22% of BPCL’s spot intake based on refinery configurations, according to the official. The grades presently make up about 20%. The firm’s annual oil consumption is around 40 million tons, of which close to 90% is imported, the official said.
India’s Oil Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said this week that the nation seeks to harness its growing buying power to secure favorable deals. OPEC’s Secretary General has invited the Indian minister to the producer group’s next meeting, Puri said on Wednesday.