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India, Iran to settle some oil trade in rupees

Kaniska

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Jan 20 (Reuters) - India and Iran have agreed to settle some of their $12 billion annual oil trade in rupees, a government source said on Friday, resorting to the restricted currency after more than a year of payment problems in the face of fresh, tougher U.S. sanctions.

India, the world's fourth-largest oil consumer, relies on Iran for about 12 percent of its imports or 350,000-400,000 barrels per day (bpd) and is Tehran's second-biggest oil client after China.

But Washington has snapped tighter financial sanctions on Iran and wants Asia, Tehran's biggest oil market, to cut imports in a bid to pressure the Islamic nation to rein in its nuclear ambitions, which it suspects are aimed at making weapons.

Iran rejects the charge and says its programme is for peaceful means.

India's central bank stopped one clearing mechanism in December 2010 for Iran payments and refiners finally managed to secure a route through Turkey's Halkbank in July 2011 but this could be vulnerable to the new U.S. measures.

An Indian delegation has been in Tehran this week discussing options for payment and the source said the decision to pay in rupees was made after a meeting there.

"The Central Bank of Iran will open an account with an Indian bank for receiving payment and settling its import," the source, who has direct knowledge of the matter, said, adding the new system will start "soon".

The source did not specify the name of the Indian bank. But other sources have said that Iran could open an account with India's UCO Bank as it does not have any interests in the United States.

In addition to rupee payments, Indian refiners will continue to make payments through the current mechanism using Halkbank, this source said, "as long as it continues".

Turkey and Iran said on Thursday they want to increase financial transfers and that work is underway to strengthen banking ties.

The new U.S. sanctions, authorised on Dec. 31, penalise any financial institution dealing with Iran's central bank, the main clearing house for oil payments. However, a country can earn a waiver if it significantly reduces trade with Iran.

India, whose biggest supplier is Iran's OPEC and regional rival Saudi Arabia, has said it will not seek a waiver and will continue to trade with Iran, following only U.N. sanctions.

India Trade Secretary Rahul Khullar said this week that the Indian delegation to Iran would work around the U.S. sanctions to protect oil supplies and promote Indian exports.

The government source said Iran has agreed to step up imports from India which added up to some $2.7 billion in 2010/11 and including oilmeal, rice and tea.

"This will cushion them (Iran) to some extent from exchange rate volatility," the source said.

The rupee is only partly convertible, limiting its acceptability internationally. In addition, it was the worst performing major currency in Asia last year, losing about 16 percent against the dollar, and it remains volatile.

Asian support for U.S. sanctions is vital since the region buys more than half of Iran's daily crude exports. The European Union has agreed in principle to halting Iranian crude imports and could finalise the ban on Jan. 23.

China, Iran's biggest crude customer, has rejected the U.S. sanctions as overstepping the mark and defended its extensive imports from the second-biggest oil producer in OPEC.

India, Iran to settle some oil trade in rupees-source | Reuters
 
Good we are able to export some stuff for oil that is a big plus though I agree a lot of work need to be put in to make the Rupee stable.
 
This is news of the day, and if US sanctions continue without war, this might as well be a turning point for EU and Asia, like the WWII was for Europe and USA. EU(especially the weakest members of EU) lost a big supplier of oil at a time of crisis. And Asia's(India's as well as China's) oil supplies get cheaper when they are looking for means to sustain their roaring growth. And another bullet for dollar-Euro dominance. Now war is more important than ever for the West.
Look at this juicy fact: Iran's production rate of oil per day is equal to Indian consumption rate per day.
Iran produces ~ 4.2 mil barrels per day (2010)
Iran consumes ~ 1.8 mil barrels per day (2010)
India consumes ~ 4 mil barrels per day(2010)
India produces ~ 1 mil barrels per day(2010)
China consumes ~ 9 mil barrels per day(2010)
China produces ~ 4.3 mil barrels per day(2010)
Source: cia
 
Why only "some oil"? Iranians don't want to trade in USD and since they have accepted Rupee, I think we should move on to Rupee-Toman payment. But the problem is twofold here:

- We will have to create a reserve for Toman on our part.
- Iranians will end up with a rainbow of currency reserves after sometime: Indian Rupee, Chinese Renmibi, Russian Ruble etc.
 
Pay Iran his money if remains any thing. How we cant pay its money on petrolium.
 
we should not be trading oil with a country that is prone to being economically sanctioned as it will be difficult to trade with them, the free worlds weakness is relying on the fascist oil rich gulf countries with only now populations fighting for freedom against their oppressive regimes. the sooner we focus on cleaner and reusable energy such as CNG or even electric run cars the better it is for India and the entire world because the middle east loses its edge with oil and pollution in the world would also decrease.

just a couple of thoughts on this situation...
 
^^
China produces more oil than Iran?
Apparently. But Iran obviously has more production capacity. They can develop more fields if the sanctions are not present. Iran could produce a peak of 6+ mil barrels/day in 1980s. SaudiArabia(a country which has the highest buffer capacity)'s historic peak is apparently 10.5 mil barrels/day and current production is close to that. I wonder how they can claim they will replace Iran's production capacity completely to facilitate US sanctions. It would be interesting to watch them supply at peak level.
 
It's funny, when this issue first arises a certain nationality had a lot to say, now they are noticeable for their absence.


Strange......
 
Why only "some oil"? Iranians don't want to trade in USD and since they have accepted Rupee, I think we should move on to Rupee-Toman payment. But the problem is twofold here:

- We will have to create a reserve for Toman on our part.
- Iranians will end up with a rainbow of currency reserves after sometime: Indian Rupee, Chinese Renmibi, Russian Ruble etc.

Their point is: they will accept only as many rupees as they have imports from India. So that they don't end up with excess rupee reserve. Rupee, as mentioned in the lead article, is the worst performing currency in Asia currently. I am sure Iranian economists are intelligent enough to handle the exchange rates:). The only place they are ***pping up is setting the value of their own currency, which they are trying to peg artificially due to political reasons.
The advantage for India is: we don't need to buy Euros from open market to the extent of some value of the Iranian oil. And because Iranian currency is free-falling now, they are basically forced to override the concern about rupee's performance. They have no choice but accept this offer(the weakest currency, Rupee).
I actually believe(its kinda obvious too) India's efforts to find an alternative mechanism to make oil payments for the last few years have been less than earnest. Because India is waiting for exactly this kind of a deal. Wait for Iran to get isolated and talk them into accepting rupees. Makes perfect business sense.
The best thing for both countries is to realize the full potential of their trade. India should try to produce and export whatever is of worth to Iran. Iran should try to replace its importers with Indian and Chinese industries. It is a win-win-win deal for all countries.
 

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