Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak remains confident in ongoing energy ties with India despite speculation of reduced oil imports. He noted only public statements so far, highlighting Russia's resources as highly demanded and economically vital for partners. Cooperation is expected to persist amid shifting geopolitics.
Russian energy ties with India face scrutiny amid U.S. pressures and sanctions, but Novak projects stability. Recent data shows India's Russian crude imports declining from 36.4% of total in early 2025 to below 25% by early 2026 yet Novak focuses on demand drivers.
India has diversified to Middle East, Africa, and South America suppliers, with refiners like Reliance cutting volumes post-sanctions on Rosneft and Lukoil. Payments shift to rubles and yuan, underscoring resilient trade.
Key Highlights
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Demand Assurance: Novak: "Our commodity resources are in demand," economically beneficial for India.
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Public Statements Only: No firm actions seen beyond media reports on potential cuts.
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Import Trends: Russia supplied 87.5M tonnes (36.4%) in 7M 2025; now declining due to sanctions.
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Future Outlook: Confident in continued partnership despite U.S. tariffs and diversification.
Sources: Interfax, Reuters, Marketscreener, Economic Times