EU Sanctions Disrupt Fuel Exports of Indian Refiner Nayara Energy

Indian refiner Nayara Energy, in which Russia’s top oil firm Rosneft holds 49%, is already experiencing disruption to its fuel exports, days after the EU sanctioned the refiner for being a major customer of Russian crude. 

Last Friday, the EU adopted the 18th sanctions package against Russia, targeting a hundred more ‘shadow fleet’ tankers, energy trade, and traders and banks enabling it.    

In a first move against customers of Russian oil, the EU expanded sanctions on entities doing business with Russian oil, including via asset freezes, travel bans, bans on providing resources. The bloc sanctioned Russian and international companies managing shadow fleet vessels, traders of Russian crude oil, and a major customer of the shadow fleet – the Nayara Energy refinery in India with Rosneft as its main shareholder. 

The Indian refiner has changed the payment terms to sell a spot naphtha cargo seeking advance payment or a letter of credit from the potential buyer for loading of the cargo in mid-August, a tender document seen by Reuters showed on Monday. 

In addition, a tanker chartered by BP left on Sunday the Indian port of Vadinar without loading ultra-low sulfur diesel from Nayara’s terminal, Reuters reported, quoting industry sources and vessel-tracking data from LSEG. 

The booking was cancelled after the EU sanctions, shipbrokers told Bloomberg on Tuesday.  

Another tanker, chartered by PetroChina, will not be loading diesel at Nayara’s Vadinar port the end of this month en route to Southeast Asia, sources told Reuters on Wednesday.  

The tanker, the Chang Hang Xing Yun, is expected instead to load ultra-low sulfur diesel (ULSD) from Kuwait on August 1 and head to East Africa, per LSEG ship-tracking data and a shipping source who spoke to Reuters on Wednesday.

Moreover, due to the fresh EU sanctions targeting oil derivatives made from Russian crude in third countries, Indian refiners would likely need to tap the services of fuel traders to find new markets for their output. 

India is one of the largest buyers of Russian crude, and a lot of the fuels it makes from that crude end up on the European market.   

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Analyst Explains Friday’s Oil Price Rise

    Crude is continuing to gap higher as the market still lacks clarity around the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. That’s what Rebecca Babin, a senior equity trader for CIBC…

    IMF: Oil Price Shock Tests Global Economic Resilience

    The surge in oil and LNG prices as a result of the Middle East war is testing the resilience of the global economy once again, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva…

    Have You Seen?

    Podcast | Crisis in the Gulf: what the Iran conflict means for helium and energy

    • March 6, 2026
    Podcast | Crisis in the Gulf: what the Iran conflict means for helium and energy

    Analyst Explains Friday’s Oil Price Rise

    • March 6, 2026
    Analyst Explains Friday’s Oil Price Rise

    Top 5 takeaways from the Gulf’s toughest week

    • March 6, 2026
    Top 5 takeaways from the Gulf’s toughest week

    THE NEW ESG – For Energy, ESG Now Means Economics, Security and Geopolitics

    • March 6, 2026
    THE NEW ESG – For Energy, ESG Now Means Economics, Security and Geopolitics

    Daily Ship Traffic in Strait of Hormuz Plummets From 138 to Just 2

    • March 6, 2026
    Daily Ship Traffic in Strait of Hormuz Plummets From 138 to Just 2

    HSFO Prices Jump 40% as War Chokes Key Singapore Bunkering Hub

    • March 6, 2026
    HSFO Prices Jump 40% as War Chokes Key Singapore Bunkering Hub

    IMF: Oil Price Shock Tests Global Economic Resilience

    • March 6, 2026
    IMF: Oil Price Shock Tests Global Economic Resilience

    Europe-Bound LNG Cargoes Divert to Asia as War Upends Gas Market

    • March 6, 2026
    Europe-Bound LNG Cargoes Divert to Asia as War Upends Gas Market

    QatarEnergy warns on Polish LNG delivery following force majeure

    • March 6, 2026
    QatarEnergy warns on Polish LNG delivery following force majeure

    Carbonfuture signs carbon removal credit deal with Boeing

    • March 6, 2026
    Carbonfuture signs carbon removal credit deal with Boeing