US Energy Secretary Chris Wright dropped a significant disclosure on March 6: America has reached out to India to snap up Russian oil floating in tankers near South Asia. This short-term ploy aims to flood refineries with supply and tame surging oil prices triggered by Hormuz Strait bottlenecks.
In an interview, Wright detailed how the US identified vast Russian crude reserves—much of it backed up from China—idling in regional waters. The pitch to India? Buy it, process it, and release refined products fast to markets.
Shipping woes around the narrow Hormuz waterway, squeezed between Iran and Oman, have sparked supply disruption jitters. This corridor funnels 20% of global maritime oil flows, making any snag a price trigger.
By channeling the oil to India’s robust refining sector, the plan sidesteps fierce bidding wars among refineries worldwide. ‘It relieves pressure because other refiners don’t compete with Indians for supplies,’ Wright noted.
India’s voracious appetite for cheap Russian crude has grown since the Ukraine war upended trade patterns. Discounted barrels fuel its refineries, which churn out exports feeding global demand.
The secretary underscored the temporary nature: ‘Short-term measures to get oil to market now. Long-term, supply is plentiful—no worries there.’ Importantly, this doesn’t signal any US thaw on Russia sanctions.
‘Purely a brief adjustment for price control,’ Wright affirmed. As energy markets brace for Hormuz volatility, this India-centric fix exemplifies pragmatic crisis management in the oil trade.