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India and Iran Trade: How India Managed the Oil Shock and Found Smarter Partners

 

In 2018, India was one of the biggest buyers of Iranian oil. The two countries shared a strong energy bond. But by 2024, that oil trade dropped to zero. What happened?

This is a story about smart decision-making, tough diplomacy, and how India handled a global oil crisis without hurting its economy. It’s also a lesson in how to stay prepared when the world changes fast.

Back in 2018: Iran Was a Key Oil Partner for India

India and Iran have been trading for centuries. In modern times, especially in energy, the partnership has become stronger.

By 2018:

Beyond oil:

But this changed rapidly in 2019.

The Turning Point: U.S. Sanctions Shut the Oil Tap

In May 2019, the United States imposed strict sanctions on Iran under its CAATSA law (Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act).

The U.S. warned all countries: If you buy oil from Iran, you could face penalties.

India was stuck. Either continue buying oil from Iran and risk U.S. sanctions, or stop and find new suppliers. India chose the safer route.

What changed after May 2019?

India needed alternatives — fast.

India’s Smart Move: New Oil Suppliers at Better Prices

India didn’t panic. It started importing oil from other countries, especially those offering better deals.

Russia Became India’s Top Oil Partner

India saved over ₹40,000 crore (about $5 billion) each year by buying discounted Russian oil.

Other top suppliers in 2023–24:

With this shift, India secured its energy supply without depending on Iran.

India’s Back-Up Plans: More Than Just Oil

India didn’t just switch oil partners. It made deeper, long-term changes to protect itself from future price shocks.

1. Oil Storage for Emergencies

2. Renewable Energy Expansion

Cleaner energy means less pressure on oil imports and more price stability.

What About India-Iran Trade Now?

Even though oil trade stopped, the overall relationship didn’t end. Non-oil trade continued, though at a smaller scale.

India-Iran Trade (2022–24)

Iran is still a key buyer of Indian pharmaceuticals and agricultural products. So, while the oil money dried up, other sectors kept the trade channel open.

The Strategic Bet: Chabahar Port

One of India’s smartest and quietest investments in Iran is the Chabahar Port.

Why Chabahar Matters:

Future Vision:

Despite U.S. pressure, India sees long-term strategic value in staying involved at Chabahar.

What If U.S. Sanctions End? Will India Buy Oil from Iran Again?

Even if the U.S. lifts sanctions tomorrow, India may not return quickly to Iranian oil.

Here’s why:

Instead, India may focus on non-oil trade and infrastructure cooperation with Iran.

Key Figures: A Quick Summary

Key Indicator Value (2023–24)
Iran’s share in India’s oil imports 0% (down from 10% in 2018)
Russian oil share 35% (up from 2% in 2021)
India’s savings from Russian discounts Over ₹40,000 crore/year
Chabahar Port investment ₹4,200 crore
Chabahar cargo handled (2023) 2.5 million tonnes
India’s oil emergency stock (SPR) 5.33 million tonnes
Non-oil trade with Iran ₹16,000 crore/year
Indian pharma exports to Iran ₹3,200 crore/year
Basmati rice exports to Iran 1.2 million tonnes/year
Renewable energy capacity 125 GW (doubled since 2019)

Conclusion: India’s Quiet Oil Revolution

India faced a major challenge in 2019. Losing a top oil supplier could have caused a crisis. But instead of reacting with panic, India made a carefully planned shift.

Today, India is more energy-secure, cost-efficient, and geopolitically flexible than it was five years ago.

The Iran chapter in India’s oil story may have paused, but the wider trade relationship remains alive and evolving.

 

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