India-Russia energy ties move from discount trade to crisis insurance
The reversal is striking because India had only recently cut back Russian purchases under U.S. pressure and leaned more heavily on Middle Eastern crude. That calculus changed when Gulf supply became the risk, not the fallback. Reuters said Russian crude flows to India had already rebounded to around 1.8 million barrels a day and could reach 2 million to 2.2 million barrels a day in March, putting Russia on course to recover its position as India’s top supplier after a brief dip.
For refiners, the logic is straightforward. Russian barrels do not depend on the Hormuz chokepoint, Indian plants are already configured to process them, and Moscow remains willing to compete hard for market share. LNG is more complicated. A restart would revive a gas trade that has been largely frozen since the Ukraine war, and that same Reuters report said India has already approached Washington about a possible waiver. It also said any new LNG deal would likely be less favorable for India than the terms attached to its earlier GAIL-Gazprom arrangement.
Why India-Russia energy ties matter now
New Delhi is not facing an immediate physical shortage. Reuters reported that India has already tied up 60 days of crude supply and secured additional LPG cargoes from countries including the United States, Russia and Australia. But the bigger question is what India’s energy map looks like if the conflict drags on, freight stays expensive and Gulf flows remain vulnerable to new military escalation.
That is why this shift looks bigger than another burst of opportunistic buying. For most of the Ukraine-war period, Russian crude helped India cut costs. In the current crisis, Russia is again becoming a strategic buffer. The change is not ideological. It is geographic. The less certain Hormuz looks, the more valuable non-Gulf energy becomes even before price discounts are counted.
There are limits. Any revived LNG deal is likely to be less attractive for India than the one it once had, because sellers now have the advantage and India is negotiating from a weaker position. A faster return to Russian energy could also reopen friction with Washington just as New Delhi tries to protect broader trade and strategic ties with the United States.
How India-Russia energy ties reached this point
The current turn has a long backstory. Gazprom and GAIL signed a 20-year LNG deal in 2012, creating the formal base for long-term gas trade. By 2022, GAIL was back in talks with Moscow to restore contracted LNG supplies disrupted after the Ukraine war. And by late 2023, Russia had already climbed to roughly 40% of India’s total oil imports, showing that New Delhi was prepared to lean heavily on Russian energy when commercial and geopolitical conditions aligned.
What makes this phase different is that oil, LNG and regional security risk are all colliding at once. India is not just balancing cheap barrels against diplomatic pressure. It is balancing sanctions exposure, domestic fuel stability, freight risk and the political cost of being caught short in the middle of a wider Asian energy squeeze.
If the Iran war crisis eases quickly, India may keep this pivot tactical. If it does not, the reopening of Russian LNG talks and the rebound in crude imports could mark the moment India-Russia energy ties moved from opportunistic trade back to core energy strategy.

