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India News Updated Jun 29, 2026

India’s Swift Energy Diplomacy Averted West Asia Crisis Fuel Shortage

Former ambassador Navdeep Suri praised India's proactive energy diplomacy during the Strait of Hormuz closure on February 28, which threatened global energy markets. He highlighted that strong relations with UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar ensured continued LPG and crude oil flows. India diversified supply sources to Russia, the US, and non-traditional markets in Africa and Latin America to avoid shortages. The government absorbed price increases and sacrificed taxes to keep fuel affordable for consumers, unlike other countries facing severe crises.

Govt acted quickly to ensure normal supply of fuels during West Asia crisis: Navdeep Suri

New Delhi, June 29

Although the closure of Strait of Hormuz on February 28 was really a worst-case situation for global energy markets, the Indian government acted quickly to handle the crisis and ensure normal supply of fuels in the country, Navdeep Suri, former Ambassador of India to the UAE, said on Monday.

Speaking to IANS, Suri said "I think there was some very proactive energy diplomacy that we saw".

"The special relationship that the government has forged with countries like the UAE, with Saudi Arabia, with Qatar, came in very, very handy. We saw the Prime Minister's visit to UAE on the 15th of May. We saw the Minister of Petroleum's visit to Qatar also during the war. So I think because we had such good relations with these countries, we could keep somehow energy flows coming to us, whether it was LPG or crude oil," the former envoy observed.

He further highlighted that the other significant factor of India's diplomacy during this period has been the way the country could pivot from the Gulf to Russia, and then from Russia to the United States, and even diversify its sources by reaching out to Venezuela, to Nigeria, to Gabon, to Guyana, to some of the non-traditional suppliers in Africa and in Latin America.

"I think all of that contributed to a situation where even though many other countries were facing a serious crisis, we managed to largely avoid it," Suri remarked.

The former ambassador also pointed out that the government managed to keep prices at affordable levels for consumers. When prices were rising rapidly post February 28, when the war started, the government chose to absorb most of the increase or the oil companies chose to absorb some of the increase.

"The government sacrificed taxes, the oil companies sacrificed some of their profits and managed to keep prices in check," he told IANS.

"I think it's been fairly prudent the way the pricing situation has been handled. And I think the objective of the government was really that in the short run, the consumer should be protected," he remarked,

Suri pointed out that the government absorbed the bulk of the increase, especially when global oil prices spiked from $70 a barrel to $126 a barrel. That huge increase was largely absorbed by the government.

"It was a combination of keeping the foreign supplies, imported supplies coming in from countries like the UAE, from markets like the United States, from newer markets in Africa and Latin America, but it was also some fairly smart demand management on the Indian side itself, the way we were able to expand the production of LPG within the country fairly quickly, I think really helped," Suri said.

He also highlighted that in sharp contrast to countries like Pakistan, where schools were shut or other countries where you had massive queues and shortages of fuels, India was largely unaffected by the energy shortage.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

As someone who remembers the chaos in 2022 when prices soared, I appreciate that the government absorbed the hike. But let's be real—why should consumers bear any burden at all when oil companies make crores in profit? The tax sacrifice is good, but we need more transparency on how fuel prices are calculated. Still, credit where due for managing supplies smoothly. 👏

Vikram M

Impressive how India managed to stay afloat while Pakistan faced fuel shortages. This is what strong diplomacy looks like—maintaining ties with UAE and Saudi Arabia while also reaching out to Russia and Latin America. Shows we're not dependent on any single region. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

Ananya R

Good to know the LPG production expansion helped domestically. But I'm still worried about the common man—even after 'absorbing' increases, LPG cylinders cost ₹1,000+ in many places. The government absorption should be more aggressive, especially for lower-income households. Smart diplomacy is one thing, but ground-level relief is another. 🤔

Rohit P

This is a classic example of 'necessity is the mother of invention'—the crisis forced India to look beyond traditional suppliers. Diversification to Guyana and Gabon? Never thought we'd see that. And the PM's UAE visit timing was perfect. But I wish the article mentioned if any long-term contracts were signed with these new partners. Still, well played, India! 🎯

Kavya N

Smart move to increase domestic LPG production—that's self-reliance right there. But let's not forget that our energy needs are massive

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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