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India Inks Pact With Iran To Pay For Crude Imports In Rupee

Half of these funds will be earmarked for settling payments for exports of Indian goods to Iran. 

A worker holds Indian ten rupee banknotes at a warehouse in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
A worker holds Indian ten rupee banknotes at a warehouse in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

India has signed an agreement with Iran to pay for crude oil it imports from the Gulf country in rupees, sources in know of the development said.

The memorandum of understanding was signed following the U.S. letting India and seven other nations to keep buying Iranian oil despite sanctions. Indian refiners will make rupee payments in a UCO Bank account of the National Iranian Oil Co., sources told PTI.

Half of these funds will be earmarked for settling payments for exports of Indian goods to Iran, they said. Under the U.S. sanctions, India can export food grains, medicines and medical devices to Iran.

India had won the exemption after it agreed to cut imports and escrow payments. Under the 180-day exemption, India is allowed to import a maximum of 3 lakh barrels a day of crude oil. This compares to an average daily import of about 5.6 lakh barrels this year.

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India, which is the second biggest purchaser of Iranian oil after China, has since then restricted its monthly purchase to 1.25 million tonne or 15 million tonne in a year, down from 22.6 million tonne bought in the financial year 2017-18, sources said.

Two of its refiners - Indian Oil Corp and Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals - bought 1.25 million tonne of oil from Iran in November and December.

India, the world's third biggest oil consumer, meets more than 80 percent of its oil needs through imports. Iran is its third largest supplier after Iraq and Saudi Arabia and meets about 10 percent of total needs.

U.S. President Donald Trump in May withdrew from the 2015 nuclear accord with Iran, re-imposing economic sanctions on the Persian Gulf nation. Some sanctions took effect from Aug. 6, while those affecting the oil and banking sectors started from Nov. 5.

Prior to this, India paid its third largest oil supplier in euros using European banking channels. These channels got blocked from November.

During the first round of sanctions when EU joined the U.S. in imposing financial restrictions, India initially used a Turkish bank to pay Iran for the oil it bought. Beginning February 2013, India paid 45 percent of the oil import bill in rupees while keeping the remainder pending till the opening of payment routes. It began clearing the dues in 2015 when the restrictions were eased.

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Sources said New Delhi may export goods, including wheat, soybean meal and consumer products, to Iran during the exemption period.

Iran was the India's second biggest supplier of crude oil after Saudi Arabia till 2010-11 but Western sanctions over the Persian Gulf nation's suspected nuclear programme relegated it to the seventh spot in the subsequent years. In 2013-14 and 2014-15, India bought 11 million tonne and 10.95 million tonne crude, respectively, from Iran.

Sourcing from Iran increased to 12.7 million tonne in 2015-16, giving it the sixth spot. In the following year, the Iranian supplies jumped to 27.2 million tonne to catapult it to the third spot.

Iranian oil is a lucrative buy for refiners as the Persian Gulf nation provides 60 days of credit for purchases, terms not available from suppliers of substitute crude - Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Nigeria and the U.S.

Besides blocking of banking channels from November, shipping firms are unwilling to transport Iranian oil. To get around this, Iran is using its own ships to transport crude to India. Its insurance companies are also providing insurance cover for such shipments, sources added.

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