Washington wants Delhi to buy more US oil & gas, says Rubio ahead of India visit
Ahead of his four-day India visit (May 23–26, 2026), US Secretary of State Marco Rubio signalled that Washington seeks a significant expansion of US energy e...
What Happened
- Ahead of his four-day India visit (May 23–26, 2026), US Secretary of State Marco Rubio signalled that Washington seeks a significant expansion of US energy exports to India, stating: "We want to sell them as much energy as they'll buy. We are at historic levels of US production and export."
- Rubio also raised the possibility of India accessing Venezuelan crude, noting that interim Venezuelan president Delcy Rodríguez was expected to visit India the following week — a development reflecting US interest in reshaping Venezuela's export markets.
- The visit coincided with a Quad foreign ministers' meeting on May 26, 2026 in New Delhi, attended by ministers from the US, India, Australia, and Japan; outcomes included an Indo-Pacific Energy Security initiative and expanded maritime domain awareness cooperation.
- Both sides discussed progress toward a bilateral trade agreement, with energy as a central pillar; the US-India energy trade target stands at raising annual volumes from $15 billion to $25 billion.
- India's energy security concerns have been heightened by tensions around the Strait of Hormuz, through which a significant share of India's crude oil imports traditionally transited.
Static Topic Bridges
India's Energy Security and Import Dependence
Energy security is a core dimension of India's economic planning and foreign policy. India is the world's third-largest energy consumer and imports approximately 87% of its crude oil requirement. As of March 2026, India imports crude from around 40 countries — a deliberate diversification strategy pursued after supply disruptions tied to the Russia-Ukraine conflict and West Asian instability. Despite this diversification, India's dependence on the Strait of Hormuz — a critical maritime chokepoint — for a significant fraction of its imports has remained a strategic vulnerability.
- India's crude oil consumption is approximately 5.5 million barrels per day (2025), projected to rise to 6.7 million barrels per day by 2030.
- India has contracts with US LNG terminals including Sabine Pass and Cove Point, and is in discussions for equity stakes in projects like Driftwood LNG.
- As of 2026, India can source approximately 70% of its crude oil from outside the Strait of Hormuz — an improvement from earlier dependence levels.
- India's annual consumption of US energy was committed to grow from $15 billion to $25 billion as announced by Indian officials in 2025.
Connection to this news: Rubio's explicit pitch for US energy sales directly addresses India's diversification imperative — positioning American oil, LNG, and possibly Venezuelan crude (re-routed through US geopolitical influence) as alternatives to politically volatile Middle Eastern and Russian supplies.
The Strait of Hormuz and Maritime Chokepoints
The Strait of Hormuz is a 33-kilometre-wide waterway connecting the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea. It is the world's most critical oil transit chokepoint: approximately 20–21 million barrels of oil per day (roughly 20% of global oil consumption) transited through it in recent years. Any disruption — through conflict, blockade, or mining — would have immediate and severe consequences for global energy markets.
- The Strait of Hormuz is flanked by Iran to the north and Oman to the south; Iran has periodically threatened to close it during geopolitical tensions.
- India has been working to reduce Hormuz dependency by increasing purchases from the US, Russia, West Africa, and Latin America.
- Under international law (UNCLOS), the Strait of Hormuz is subject to the right of "transit passage" for all ships, including warships, but Iran disputes this for warships.
Connection to this news: The West Asia conflict context cited by Rubio — and India's intensified focus on supply diversification away from Hormuz-dependent routes — explains why US energy offers find a receptive audience in New Delhi, making energy a strategic lever in the broader India-US partnership.
The Quad — Purpose, Structure, and Energy Dimension
The Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) is a strategic grouping of four democracies — India, the United States, Australia, and Japan — focused on maintaining a free, open, and prosperous Indo-Pacific. Re-activated in 2017 and elevated to leader-level summits in 2021, the Quad has expanded beyond its original security mandate to encompass technology, health, infrastructure, critical minerals, and energy.
- The Quad was first convened in 2007 at the initiative of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, but was suspended in 2008 before being revived in 2017.
- Quad foreign ministers met in New Delhi on May 26, 2026 — outcomes included the Indo-Pacific Energy Security initiative, the Indo-Pacific Maritime Surveillance Collaboration (IPMSC), and a $20 billion critical minerals supply-chain mobilization commitment.
- The Quad's Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness (IPMDA) was expanded at the May 2026 meeting.
Connection to this news: Rubio's India visit and his energy diplomacy pitch were embedded within the Quad context — the bilateral energy push was simultaneously framed as a multilateral Indo-Pacific stability initiative, linking India's crude diversification to the Quad's broader strategic goals.
Venezuela's Energy Geopolitics
Venezuela holds the world's largest proven crude oil reserves (approximately 300 billion barrels). Despite this, its oil production collapsed after a decade of economic mismanagement, sanctions, and political crisis. Following political changes in Venezuela, the US and other Western governments have shown interest in helping Venezuela re-enter international oil markets — partly to displace Russian oil in Asian markets.
- Venezuela's Orinoco Belt holds some of the largest accumulations of extra-heavy crude in the world — which requires upgrading and blending before refining.
- India's Reliance Industries has previously purchased Venezuelan crude and has technical capability to refine heavy crudes.
- The US has used its sanctions waiver mechanisms to allow selective Venezuelan oil trade, creating an indirect geopolitical leverage tool.
Connection to this news: Rubio's suggestion that India could access Venezuelan crude — with an impending visit by Venezuela's leader — signals Washington's attempt to reshape energy trade flows by redirecting Venezuelan oil toward India and away from markets Washington views less favourably, while simultaneously reducing India's Russian oil imports.
Key Facts & Data
- India imports approximately 87% of its crude oil requirement.
- India's crude consumption: ~5.5 million barrels per day (2025), rising to ~6.7 mbd by 2030.
- India sources crude from ~40 countries as of March 2026; ~70% now from outside the Strait of Hormuz.
- US-India energy trade target: grow from $15 billion to $25 billion annually.
- Rubio's India visit: May 23–26, 2026 — his first visit to India as Secretary of State.
- Quad foreign ministers' meeting: May 26, 2026, New Delhi.
- Quad critical minerals commitment: up to $20 billion in government and private-sector support.
- Venezuela holds the world's largest proven crude oil reserves: ~300 billion barrels.
- Strait of Hormuz daily oil transit: ~20–21 million barrels (roughly 20% of global consumption).
- India-US signed a comprehensive Underwater Domain Awareness roadmap during Rubio's visit.