Tuesday, March 3, 2026
31.1 C
New Delhi

Hormuz Crisis: India’s 100 Million Barrel Oil Stock Can Cushion Short-Term Shock

Show Quick Read

Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom

India holds about 100 million barrels of commercial crude oil stocks – in storage tanks, underground strategic reserves and on ships voyaging towards the country – which could cover roughly 40-45 days of its requirement if flows through the Strait of Hormuz are disrupted, according to Kpler.

India imports about 88 per cent of the crude oil it needs – the raw material for fuels such as petrol and diesel – with more than 50 per cent supplied by Middle Eastern countries and transiting the narrow Strait of Hormuz, flows from which have been disrupted amid the Iran crisis.

If Middle Eastern crude supply were to halt completely for a temporary period, the immediate impact would be logistical and price-driven, with supply risks intensifying if movement through the Strait of Hormuz is disrupted for longer, said Sumit Ritolia, Lead Research Analyst, Refining & Modeling at Kpler.

A closure of Strait of Hormuz would at first impact prompt cargo liftings. “However, refiners typically maintain commercial inventories, and cargoes already on water would continue to arrive, providing some short-term cushioning to the system,” he said adding in the event of a prolonged disruption, medium-term pressures would build through higher import costs, freight exposure and the need to reroute supplies over longer distances.

“The country maintains strategic petroleum reserves alongside commercial inventories held by refiners and oil marketing companies. These buffers are intended to manage temporary supply shocks rather than sustained outages,” he said. “Based on Kpler inventory data, commercial crude stocks are around 100 million barrels, including volumes in the strategic petroleum reserve (SPR) facilities at Mangalore, Padur and Visakhapatnam.” With imports via the Strait of Hormuz averaging roughly 2.5 million barrels per day – about half of India’s just over 5 million bpd total crude imports – these combined reserves could theoretically cover around 40-45 days of imports in a crude disruption scenario, he said.

Additional refined product inventories would extend effective coverage further.

However, the immediate impact will be on prices. Brent, global benchmark, crossed USD 80 per barrel, roughly 10 per cent more since the Iran crisis. For India, higher prices means higher import bill.

India spent USD 137 billion on crude oil imports in fiscal year ended March 31, 2025. During April 2025 to January 2026 – first ten months of current fiscal – it spent USD 100.4 billion on import of 206.3 million tonnes of crude oil.

The United States and Israel launched military strikes on targets in Iran over the weekend. Tehran retaliated with missiles and drones aimed at Israel and countries hosting US forces, including the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

Media reports suggest the conflict has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, a key conduit for global energy flows. Roughly one-third of the world’s seaborne crude oil exports and about 20 per cent of liquefied natural gas shipments transit the narrow waterway.

India, the world’s third largest oil importer, imports roughly half of its crude needs through the narrow Strait. Its mainstay liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplier in Qatar also uses the strait to ship the fuel to India.

In case of closure, India can tap suppliers in West Africa, Latin Amercia and the US to make up for the shortfall from the Middle-East. India could also tap Russian oil to make up for the deficit.

India had agreed to wind down purchases of Russian oil as part of a trade deal with the US – a deal which now sits in limbo after the US Supreme Court struck down US President Donald Trump’s country-based tariffs.

“Russian cargoes currently floating in the Arabian Sea and wider Asian region without firm buyers could also be absorbed relatively quickly if required,” Ritolia said.

If the Strait of Hormuz – the narrow 33-kilometre passage connecting the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea – were disrupted or shipping were forced onto longer routes, India’s crude import bill would rise.

Even without a full blockade, higher freight, war-risk insurance and geopolitical premiums would lift landed costs.

“In a more severe scenario, policy intervention would likely become a key stabilising tool. The government could prioritise domestic energy security by asking refiners to moderate or temporarily curb refined product exports to ensure adequate domestic supply,” he said.

Given that India is among the world’s largest exporters of refined products, particularly diesel and jet, redirecting export volumes to the domestic market would provide an additional buffer.

India exported 23.7 million tonnes (474,000 bpd) of petroleum products or 10 per cent of the country’s fuel consumption, in 2024-25. During April-January, exports stood at 53.3 million tones.

“If the Hormuz situation were to deteriorate meaningfully, safeguarding domestic fuel availability and price stability would likely take precedence over export optimisation, reinforcing internal supply resilience even at the cost of lower export revenues,” he said.

The worst-case scenario would involve a prolonged and severe disruption to Hormuz flows combined with sustained geopolitical escalation. In that case, crude prices would spike sharply, freight markets would tighten, and refiners could eventually be forced to trim runs if replacement barrels are delayed.

“However, such a scenario would have major global economic consequences, making it a low-probability but high-impact risk,” he said adding the near-term risk is primarily price volatility and higher import costs rather than immediate physical shortage, for now.

India has diversification options and inventory buffers, but sustained disruption would materially increase the import bill and create macroeconomic pressures. 

(Disclaimer: This report has been published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. Apart from the headline, no editing has been done in the copy by ABP Live.)

Go to Source

Hot this week

iPhone 16 Pro Gets Flat Rs 16,000 Off, And There’s Even More Discount If You Do This

Show Quick Read Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom iPhone 16 Pro is here at a discount, and this time, it’s a direct price cut. If you were waiting for the right moment to upgrade, this might be it. Read More

Mumbai airfares spike: T20 semi-final fever drives surge in ticket prices amid flight disruptions

Airfares to Mumbai climb ahead of India’s T20 World Cup semi-final at Wankhede, with last-minute demand and festival travel tightening seat availability and lifting prices across key domestic route Go to Source Read More

Pakistan Shuts Part Of Its Airspace As West Asia Conflict Intensifies, Over 300 Flights Cancelled

Pakistan shut parts of its airspace through March 31, issuing a NOTAM. Over 300 Gulf flights are down as US-Israeli strikes on Iran send regional aviation into a tailspin. Read More

Gas and oil prices soar and shares tumble as crucial shipping lane threatened

Iranian official threatens to “set fire” to any ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz. Read More

From CAA criticism to Kashmir remark: History that frames India’s silence over Khamenei’s demise

NEW DELHI: India has refrained from condemning the assassination of Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei, even as it has criticised Iranian strikes on Gulf countries and called for restraint, dialogue and de-escalation in West Asia. Read More

Topics

iPhone 16 Pro Gets Flat Rs 16,000 Off, And There’s Even More Discount If You Do This

Show Quick Read Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom iPhone 16 Pro is here at a discount, and this time, it’s a direct price cut. If you were waiting for the right moment to upgrade, this might be it. Read More

Mumbai airfares spike: T20 semi-final fever drives surge in ticket prices amid flight disruptions

Airfares to Mumbai climb ahead of India’s T20 World Cup semi-final at Wankhede, with last-minute demand and festival travel tightening seat availability and lifting prices across key domestic route Go to Source Read More

Pakistan Shuts Part Of Its Airspace As West Asia Conflict Intensifies, Over 300 Flights Cancelled

Pakistan shut parts of its airspace through March 31, issuing a NOTAM. Over 300 Gulf flights are down as US-Israeli strikes on Iran send regional aviation into a tailspin. Read More

Gas and oil prices soar and shares tumble as crucial shipping lane threatened

Iranian official threatens to “set fire” to any ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz. Read More

From CAA criticism to Kashmir remark: History that frames India’s silence over Khamenei’s demise

NEW DELHI: India has refrained from condemning the assassination of Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei, even as it has criticised Iranian strikes on Gulf countries and called for restraint, dialogue and de-escalation in West Asia. Read More

‘No better feeling’: Air India flies 149 stranded passengers to Delhi from Dubai amid escalating West Asia tensions

Image credit: Air India newsroom NEW DELHI: Amid the escalating tension in West Asia, Air India brought back 149 passengers stranded in Dubai to Delhi on Monday. Read More

Trading, Not Digital Arrest, Is New Modus Operandi Of Cybercriminals, Reveals MHA Data

Maharashtra, UP, and Rajasthan have emerged as the “illicit money parking hub”, data from the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre reveals Go to Source Read More

Calling Someone By Profession Not A Crime Under SC/ST Act, Says Allahabad HC In ‘Dhobin’ Case

The Allahabad High Court ruled that addressing someone by their profession isn’t an offence under the SC/ST Act unless intended to insult Go to Source Read More

Related Articles