The pressure of US sanctions on Iran is evident with Indian
refiners shifting attention to other crude oil producing nations. Though India has been maintaining that it is not
reducing imports from Iran ,
the import numbers for 2011-12 tell a different story.
Supplies from Iraq and Kuwait have seen a significant increase, even as
Saudi Arabia
maintained its position as the largest supplier. Till now, Iran was India 's
second-biggest crude oil supplier after Saudi
Arabia , meeting about 12 per cent of the country's needs,
but the position has been taken over by Iraq .
Domestic refiners such as Hindustan Petroleum Corporation, Mangalore
Refinery and Petrochemicals Ltd and Essar Oil are expected to cut sourcing from
Iran
by at least 10 per cent. Bharat Petroleum Corporation has already stopped
sourcing.
According to industry observers, Iraq has emerged as the next major
supplier as two big domestic refiners — Indian Oil Corporation and Reliance
Industries — source their crude oil from there.
Sourcing from Iran
may see a further drop after June, unless there is a diplomatic intervention.
India is hosting the US Secretary of State, Ms Hillary Clinton, starting Sunday
(in Kolkata) followed by two days in New Delhi, sources said.
Indian refiners imported 171.41 million tonnes of crude oil in 2011-12. Of
this, 32.63 mt came from Saudi Arabia, 24.51 million tonnes from Iraq, 17.67 mt
from Kuwait, and 15.79 mt from UAE (14.706 mt in 2010-11).
Payment woes
The sanctions also made payments for supplies from Iran difficult.
A third-country payment mechanism was worked out. Indian refiners paid for
their Iranian oil imports through Turkey 's Halkbank. But, there is a
fear that this system may collapse because of the new US sanctions.
A method was also worked out wherein National Iranian Oil Company would
accept a share of the payments in rupees in an account opened in UCO Bank.
However, the 40 per cent withholding tax component made the mechanism a
non-starter. Domestic refiners had refused to shoulder the additional tax
burden, which made sourcing from Iran very expensive.
Tax exemption
In the Budget for 2012-13, the Government stepped in to exempt tax on
payment received by a foreign company in Indian currency on account of sale of
crude oil to any person in India .
However, certain conditions would have to be met
before benefiting from the tax exemption.
No comments:
Post a Comment