What Happened
- India's first Iranian crude oil cargo since May 2019 is heading to a Gujarat port, based on ship-tracking data, with Reliance Industries reportedly purchasing approximately 5 million barrels of Iranian crude from the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC).
- The cargo became possible after the Trump administration issued a 30-day sanctions waiver for the purchase of Iranian oil that had already been loaded on vessels on or before March 20, 2026, with discharge permitted until April 19, 2026.
- The Iranian crude was priced at approximately $7 per barrel premium to ICE Brent futures — suggesting value proposition for refiners seeking volume rather than price advantage.
- India had halted Iranian oil imports in May 2019 after the US refused to extend Significant Reduction Exemptions (SREs) that had been allowing eight countries, including India, to continue limited Iranian oil purchases.
- The broader context is escalating tensions in West Asia involving the US and Iran, which have disrupted established oil supply routes and prompted a temporary US policy adjustment to stabilise global oil markets.
- Indian state-owned shipping vessels carrying LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) from Iran also traversed the Strait of Hormuz in mid-March 2026, reflecting the reopening of Iran-India energy trade channels.
Static Topic Bridges
India's Energy Security: Import Dependence and Diversification Strategy
India is the world's third-largest oil consumer and importer, meeting over 80% of its crude oil requirements through imports. This structural dependence makes energy security a critical component of India's economic policy and foreign policy. India's oil import basket has historically been diversified across the Middle East (Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE), Russia (post-2022 war in Ukraine), and other suppliers — Iran was historically one of India's top three suppliers before the 2019 sanctions.
- India's oil imports by volume: Over 200 million tonnes per annum; crude oil is the single largest import commodity by value.
- Iran was India's top oil supplier after China in 2018-19, with India importing 23.5 million tonnes of Iranian crude that year.
- Post-2019 sanctions: India pivoted to Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, and from 2022 onwards, dramatically increased Russian crude purchases at discounted prices.
- Russia became India's top oil supplier in 2022-23, accounting for over 35% of imports — enabled by the US allowing India to buy discounted Russian oil as a strategic exception during the Ukraine war.
- Diversification reduces price-setting leverage of any single supplier and helps India negotiate favourable terms — historical relationship with Iran included a rupee-rial payment mechanism (agreed 2018) to bypass dollar-denominated SWIFT transactions.
Connection to this news: The resumption of Iranian oil imports — even temporarily — reactivates an important diversification vector for India, reducing single-supplier dependence and potentially improving negotiating positions with other suppliers.
US Sanctions on Iran: JCPOA, Secondary Sanctions, and India's Position
The US sanctions on Iran stem from a long-running dispute over Iran's nuclear programme. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), signed in 2015 between Iran and P5+1 (US, UK, France, Russia, China, Germany), temporarily lifted nuclear-related sanctions in exchange for limits on Iran's nuclear activities. The Trump administration (first term) unilaterally withdrew from JCPOA in May 2018 and reimposed "maximum pressure" sanctions — including secondary sanctions that penalised non-US entities doing business with Iran.
- Secondary sanctions: Penalise companies and governments in third countries (like India) for trading with sanctioned entities — including threats of exclusion from the SWIFT international banking system and freezing of US assets.
- Significant Reduction Exemptions (SREs): Temporary waivers granted in November 2018 to 8 countries (India, China, South Korea, Japan, Turkey, Greece, Italy, Taiwan) to continue limited Iranian oil imports — expired May 2, 2019.
- India's compliance in 2019: After the SRE expiry, India halted Iranian oil imports to avoid secondary sanctions — even though India had not formally joined the sanctions regime.
- In 2026, the Trump administration again issued a time-limited waiver (30 days, for oil already at sea loaded before March 20) — reflecting a pragmatic price-management calculation rather than a policy shift on Iran.
- India's stated policy: India does not recognise unilateral sanctions imposed by any third country (only UN Security Council-mandated sanctions are binding under international law) — but practically complies when US financial system access is at stake.
Connection to this news: The 30-day waiver is a tactical carve-out by the US — not a change in its Iran sanctions policy — allowing market participants to absorb stranded Iranian oil to prevent a price spike; India's Reliance is exploiting this brief window.
Strait of Hormuz and Energy Geopolitics
The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman at the mouth of the Persian Gulf, is the world's most critical oil chokepoint. Approximately 20-21 million barrels of oil per day transit through the Strait — roughly 20-21% of global oil consumption. Iran has periodically threatened to close the Strait in response to Western pressure. Escalating US-Iran tensions in 2026 have raised fears about Strait closure or mine-laying, disrupting oil supply routes from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, and Qatar — all of which export through the Strait.
- Alternatives to Strait of Hormuz: Saudi Arabia's East-West Pipeline (capacity: 5 million bpd) and the UAE's Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline can partially bypass the Strait — but combined capacity is well below Strait throughput.
- India has no direct pipeline connection to Gulf suppliers — all imports come by sea, making Strait disruptions directly impactful.
- Brent crude price sensitivity: Any significant Strait disruption typically triggers a $10-20 per barrel price spike on global markets, directly worsening India's current account deficit (every $10 rise in crude prices adds approximately $15 billion to India's import bill).
- India's Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR): India maintains strategic reserves at Visakhapatnam, Mangaluru, and Padur (combined capacity ~5 million tonnes) — approximately 9-10 days of import cover; the government has proposed expansion to extend cover to 30+ days.
- Iran's leverage: Its geographic control over the Strait gives Iran significant coercive capacity regardless of military strength — a key reason Western powers seek diplomatic solutions.
Connection to this news: The West Asian conflict context that prompted the US waiver also explains India's caution in fully resuming Iranian imports — any deterioration in the conflict could strand loaded Iranian tankers and expose Indian refiners to sanctions risk.
India-Iran Bilateral Relations
India and Iran have shared civilisational and cultural ties and a historically strong bilateral relationship. Iran hosts the Chabahar Port — a strategic Indian investment that provides India with an alternative route to Afghanistan and Central Asia bypassing Pakistan. India has invested approximately $85 million in Chabahar's Shahid Beheshti terminal and secured a 10-year contract to operate it. The US has granted Chabahar a specific sanctions exemption because it serves US interests in Afghanistan connectivity and regional stability.
- Chabahar Port: India's gateway to the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) — connecting India to Russia and Europe via Iran and Azerbaijan.
- India-Iran trade: Historically included basmati rice, tea, and pharmaceutical exports from India; crude oil imports to India. Rupee-rial settlement mechanism was developed to bypass dollar transactions.
- INSTC (International North-South Transport Corridor): 7,200 km multimodal route connecting Mumbai to Moscow via Iran — a strategic alternative to Suez Canal routes.
- Iran-India MoU on Chabahar: Signed 2016, operationalised 2018; 10-year operator contract signed 2024 despite US sanctions — India's most significant unilateral exception to the US sanctions framework.
- India's OVL (ONGC Videsh Limited) has historic oil block interests in Iran (Farzad-B gas field) — sanctions disrupted these investments; any resumption of oil trade could reopen gas field negotiations.
Connection to this news: The renewed Iranian oil imports are not merely a transactional decision — they signal the potential revival of a broader India-Iran economic relationship anchored in energy trade, Chabahar operations, and INSTC connectivity, which serves India's strategic interests independent of US sanctions politics.
Key Facts & Data
- Volume of Reliance's Iranian oil purchase: ~5 million barrels (from National Iranian Oil Company).
- Price: ~$7 per barrel premium to ICE Brent futures.
- US waiver: 30 days; covers oil loaded on or before March 20, 2026; discharge by April 19, 2026.
- India's last Iranian oil import: May 2019 (when US SREs expired).
- India's oil import dependence: Over 80% of crude requirements met through imports.
- Iran's share of Indian imports (2018-19): 23.5 million tonnes — third-largest supplier.
- Strait of Hormuz throughput: ~20-21 million barrels per day (~20-21% of global consumption).
- India's SPR capacity: ~5 million tonnes (~9-10 days of import cover) at Visakhapatnam, Mangaluru, Padur.
- JCPOA signed: 2015 (P5+1 + Iran); US unilateral withdrawal: May 2018 (Trump administration).
- SRE expiry: May 2, 2019 — date India halted Iranian imports.
- Chabahar Port: India's $85 million investment; 10-year operator contract signed 2024; Chabahar exempted from US sanctions.
- INSTC: 7,200 km multimodal corridor — Mumbai to Moscow via Iran.