Russia’s Discounted Oil No Longer a Bargain for India

The price gap that once made Russian Urals crude a go-to for Indian refiners is rapidly shrinking. Traders say the discount on Urals oil for August delivery to India has narrowed to just $1.70–$2 per barrel below dated Brent—the tightest spread since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

That discount is down from $2–$2.50 in July, and well below the steep markdowns India enjoyed throughout 2023 and early 2024. The reason? High demand from India and Turkey, reduced spot market availability, and falling Russian supply due to domestic refinery runs and upcoming maintenance at the Sakhalin-1 project.

For Indian refiners, the math is shifting. Spot Urals is still cheaper than other grades, but the advantage is eroding. Some refiners are already eyeing alternatives like UAE’s Murban or U.S. WTI, traders say—grades that previously lost out to the heavily discounted Russian barrels.

The narrowing spread also shows how Russia is keeping volumes moving despite sanctions, by keeping Urals prices just under the West’s $60-per-barrel price cap. That threshold allows access to Western insurance and shipping, which cuts logistics costs. In April, for example, shipping rates for Urals from Russia’s Baltic ports to India fell to $6 million per voyage, down from $7 million the month prior, thanks to increased availability of compliant tankers.

But the supply squeeze is real. Several Indian refiners have reportedly been unable to secure Urals cargoes for August. Part of that is due to term deals—Rosneft’s agreement with Reliance Industries means large volumes are tied up, leaving less crude on the spot market.

India, now Russia’s biggest seaborne oil customer, is even considering building three new strategic reserves to bolster energy security—an acknowledgment that Russian barrels may not stay cheap or plentiful forever.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com:

 

  • Related Posts

    Nigeria Pays 65% More for Gasoline as Dangote Battles Crude Import Costs

    Despite the fact that Nigeria is now home to the biggest oil refinery in Africa, Nigeria’s gasoline prices have soared to a record high amid the war in the Middle…

    South Korea Weighs First Public Driving Restrictions in 35 Years

    South Korea is weighing the possibility to extend driving curbs from civil servants’ use of vehicles to the general public if oil prices hit $120 per barrel, Finance Minister Koo…

    Have You Seen?

    War Complicates Pricing of Saudi Arabia’s Oil for Asia

    • March 30, 2026
    War Complicates Pricing of Saudi Arabia’s Oil for Asia

    South Korea Weighs First Public Driving Restrictions in 35 Years

    • March 30, 2026
    South Korea Weighs First Public Driving Restrictions in 35 Years

    Nigeria Pays 65% More for Gasoline as Dangote Battles Crude Import Costs

    • March 30, 2026
    Nigeria Pays 65% More for Gasoline as Dangote Battles Crude Import Costs

    Global Fuel Prices Are Surging as the Middle East War Hits Consumers

    • March 30, 2026
    Global Fuel Prices Are Surging as the Middle East War Hits Consumers

    China Sends Fuel to Struggling Southeast Asia Despite Export Ban

    • March 30, 2026
    China Sends Fuel to Struggling Southeast Asia Despite Export Ban

    Australia Cuts Fuel Tax in Half as Middle East War Squeezes Supply

    • March 30, 2026
    Australia Cuts Fuel Tax in Half as Middle East War Squeezes Supply

    India Leans on Coal and Renewables as War Throttles Gas Supply

    • March 30, 2026
    India Leans on Coal and Renewables as War Throttles Gas Supply

    Brent Hits $115 as Trump Threatens Iran’s Oil Wells and Power Plants

    • March 30, 2026
    Brent Hits $115 as Trump Threatens Iran’s Oil Wells and Power Plants

    Poland signs large-scale biogas power deal

    • March 30, 2026
    Poland signs large-scale biogas power deal

    Ambit Semiconductors expands AI technologies in US

    • March 30, 2026
    Ambit Semiconductors expands AI technologies in US