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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
Business

India snaps up cheap Russian oil and coal

A worker operates a crane near an oil depot in New Delhi on June 12. (Bloomberg Photo)

NEW DELHI: India’s purchases of Russian coal have spiked in recent weeks despite global sanctions on Moscow, as traders offer discounts of up to 30%, according to two trade sources and data reviewed by Reuters.

The rise in purchases of Russian oil has been even more dramatic, with Russian traders reportedly offering very flexible payment terms.

Russia, facing severe Western sanctions over its invasion of Ukraine, warned the European Union in April against sweeping sanctions on coal, saying they would backfire as the fuel would be redirected to other markets.

India has refrained from condemning Russia, with which it has longstanding political and security ties, while calling for an end to violence in Ukraine. New Delhi defends its purchases of Russian goods as part of an effort to diversify supplies and argues that a sudden halt would push up world prices and hurt its consumers.

US officials have told India there is no ban on energy imports from Russia but they do not want to see a “rapid acceleration”.

Yet as European importers shun trade with Moscow, Indian buyers are lapping up huge quantities of Russian coal despite high freight costs.

Its purchases of coal and related products jumped more than six-fold in the 20 days through Wednesday from the same period a year earlier, to $331.17 million, according to unpublished Indian government data reviewed by Reuters.

Indian petroleum refiners similarly have snapped up cheap Russian oil shunned by Western countries. The value of India’s oil trade with Russia in the 20 days through Wednesday jumped more than 31-fold to $2.22 billion, the data showed.

India’s trade ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Saturday.

“The Russian traders have been liberal with payment routes and are accepting payments in Indian rupee and United Arab Emirates dirham,” one source said. “The discounts are attractive, and this trend of higher Russian coal purchases will continue.”

Offshore units of such Russian coal traders as Suek AG, KTK and Cyprus-based Carbo One in places including Dubai and Singapore have offered discounts of 25% to 30%, triggering bulk purchases of Russian thermal coal by traders supplying to utilities and cement makers, the sources said.

The second source said the Singapore-based unit of Suek was also accepting payments in US dollars.

Suek and KTK did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Reuters could not immediately reach Carbo One.

The EU has barred new coal contracts with Russia and by mid-August will force member nations to terminate existing ones.

India bought an average of $16.55 million worth of Russian coal a day in the three weeks through Wednesday, more than double the $7.71 million it bought in the three months after Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb 24, according to Reuters calculations.

Oil purchases averaged $110.86 million a day in the 20-day period, more than triple the $31.16 million it spent in the three months to May 26.

Indian bulk buying of Russian coal is set to continue, with June imports expected to be the most in at least seven and a half years, ship tracking data from Refinitiv Eikon showed.

Bulk shipments of Russian thermal coal started reaching India in the third week of May, with orders mainly from cement and steel companies and traders, according to shipping data compiled by an Indian coal trader.

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