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INDIA Confirms buying oil from Iran

Kaniska

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(Reuters) - India wants to take as much Iranian oil as it can because terms are "favourable", Oil Minister S. Jaipal Reddy said on Monday, after talks between the two sides last week on payment options for $12 billion of crude a year following fresh U.S. sanctions.

"It will be our endeavour in future to tap the Iran source fully because the terms are fairly favourable," Reddy told journalists at an energy conference, adding India was exploring all options to pay for the crude.

India, the world's fourth-largest oil consumer, buys around 12 percent of its oil from the Islamic Republic. It pays through a Turkish bank after a previous clearing mechanism was shut down in December 2010.

But tougher U.S. sanctions signed into law on December 31 in a further bid to pressure Iran to rein in its nuclear ambitions make the route through Halkbank vulnerable.

An Indian delegation went to Tehran last week to discuss options and the two sides have agreed India could use its restricted rupee currency for some of the payments, a government source said on Friday.

An industry source confirmed on Monday that India was considering rupee payments while ruling out the possibility of paying in yen.

A rupee account for Iran could be used to settle Tehran's imports from third countries, the industry source said. "It will be an extension of the rupee arrangement wherever possible," the source said on condition of anonymity.

"Iran was very accommodative," Reddy said, adding that India respected United Nations sanctions but "we don't go by sanctions imposed by regional blocks, by certain nations."

On Monday, the European Union banned imports of oil from Iran and imposed a number of other economic sanctions, joining the United States in new measures aimed at deflecting Tehran's nuclear development programme.

Washington suspects Iran of trying to make nuclear weapons but Tehran rejects the charge and says its programme is for peaceful means.

The United States also wants buyers in Asia, Iran's biggest oil market, to cut imports to put further pressure on its economy, in what Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has called a "strangling effect" to trigger popular discontent.

"We go by our interest," Reddy said. "Iran is the second-largest supplier (to India) so we need to utilise that source."

Iran currently offers Indian refiners 90 days of credit, more than other major suppliers. Term contracts run from April 1 to March 31.

The unprecedented effort to take Iran's 2.6 million barrels of oil per day off international markets has kept global prices high, pushed down Iran's rial currency and caused a surge in the cost of basic goods for Iranians.

Iran is the world's No. 5 oil exporter and a regional rival to fellow OPEC member and leading exporter Saudi Arabia, which has said it could pump more oil to respond to any emergencies.

Indian refiners, like other buyers in Asia, have been looking to diversify crude supplies from Iran.

China, Iran's biggest customer, cut imports in January and February over contract terms and has been looking for alternative supplies.

(Writing by Jo Winterbottom; editing by Jason Neely)

India drawn to Iran's favourable oil terms - Reddy | Reuters
 
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(Reuters) -
"Iran was very accommodative," Reddy said, adding that India respected United Nations sanctions but "we don't go by sanctions imposed by regional blocks, by certain nations."


"We go by our interest," Reddy said. "Iran is the second-largest supplier (to India) so we need to utilise that source."

India drawn to Iran's favourable oil terms - Reddy | Reuters

:tup::tup: India for its independent foreign policy.
Proud of my country
 
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I have a business idea. Anyone interested? :) Huge profits.(Risks go without saying. One of them being you may not be able to visit US or EU, if you care.)
$8-B GAP, BUT NO TAKERS?

On the non-oil front, so far hardly any of the exporters and bankers — barring a mid-size nationalised bank — have shown interest in using the settlement mechanism for exports, the sources said.

Many are worried that if they deepen trade ties with Iran, it might affect their business with the US and even with the European Union, which has decided in favour of sanctions.

There is at least an $8-billion opportunity immediately in Iran awaiting the bold among India's non-oil exporting community, they said. This amount is around the gap left by their counterparts, including from Europe, that have virtually put a halt to shipments to Iran on account of the sanctions.

Also, it is learnt that Iranians are not too happy with the quality of Chinese imports, the sources said, adding that Indian exporters, if willing, can fill this huge gap.

Indian exporters can benefit in sectors such as food items, steel, medium-density fibreboard, mining and project exports. There is scope for the bilateral trade, at $13.7 billion in 2010-11, to go up to even $50 billion in a few years, they said.

Exporters and bankers are now carrying out a cost-benefit analysis of doing business with Iran.

If they find that the benefits of exports to Iran are not as much as the cost of losing business in the US or other countries supporting the US, they may be hesitant to enhance trade with Iran, they added.

The US sanctions — unlike those by the UN — are unilateral and, therefore, by going ahead with boosting trade with Iran, India is not violating any international norms, say official sources.
Business Line : Industry & Economy News : Iran agrees to pay in rupees for India's non-oil exports
 
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Good Job....there is nothing wrong to buy something that is very basic need of our economy...if you see, the economy of dis old developed nuts is going nowhere therefore they can live with reduced/stable supply of fuel, but countries like India and China, who are growing at very high rate and largely dependent on imported crude, can not afford to give up their growth just to be a party of these developed countries… provide alternate before you put sanctions…
 
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nice to see the mandarins in the MEA feathering their cap with another win . :tup:
 
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Very well done! It saddens me that our politicians are still acting under the diktat of the US and not in our economic interests. :hitwall:
 
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China and India work together,western sanction against Iran wont work.

on this matter, china and India are bound to have same opinion.

both nations buy huge quantity of oil from Iran and not buying oil from Iran will be costly for them.

perhaps for this Saudi Arabia and India entered a pact. ( expect hidden efforts of US )

US must be thinking that as India gets oil from SA it wont buy oil from Iran.
 
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Business is all about profits, India should buy even more right now coz Iran will settle for anything.
 
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From the start we followed our interests, the Iran Pakistan India pipeline was left behind for security concerns rather than any USA pressure as was talked about. However the usual arguments would be that this is concession to India by USA for future use.

After all we are regionally known to be having the baniya mentality and the quote from the official that the terms are very favourable says it all.
 
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Afterall Iranians give 90 day credit limit to indians, we shud be beside them as far as oil business is concerned.
 
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India to pay gold for Iran oil, China may follow

India has reportedly agreed to pay Tehran in gold for the oil it buys, in a move aimed at protecting Delhi from US-sanctions targeting countries who trade with Iran. China, another buyer of Iranian oil, may follow Delhi’s lead.
The report, by the Israeli-based news website DEBKAfile, states that Iran and India are negotiating backup alternatives with China and Russia, should the US and EU find a way to block the gold payment mechanism.
Delhi’s move is seen as surprising, as earlier India and Iran said they would switch to yen and rupees. China, another major importer of Iranian oil, may follow Delhi’s lead, the report adds.
India and China need to switch from the dollar in bilateral trade, since the US and EU have issued unilateral sanctions against the Iranian oil industry and financial institutions. The sanctions would ban any bank involved in oil trade with Iran from dealing with American and European counterparts.
Both India and China, two major buyers of Iranian oil accounting for 22 and 13 percent of its total export respectively, have refused to join such sanctions. This means they have to establish a reliable way of paying for crude, independently of the parts of the global financial system controlled by New York and London.
Delhi’s current plan is to effect payments through two state-owned banks, India’s UCO Bank and Turkey’s Halk Bankasi, Turkey being another country refusing to join the sanction spree.
The US issued sanctions against Iran in December, aiming to put pressure on the Islamic Republic and make its controversial nuclear program more transparent. The EU joined the initiative on Monday, banning new oil contracts with Iran, but allowing current ones to be fulfilled.
Australia on Tuesday became the latest country to voice plans for such an embargo, although the move would be more symbolic than practical, considering the country’s small share in Iran’s oil export.

Japan and South Korea, two other major buyers of Iranian crude, are in talks with Washington over the issue, although both Seoul and Tokyo are worried that stopping their imports could hurt their economies.
Iran, which is highly dependent on its sales of oil, is reacting to the sanction campaign nervously. Tehran says it will not yield to pressure, and threatens to block the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil tanker route in the Persian Gulf
 
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