India's Oil Security Exposed: West Asia Crisis Reveals Critical Gaps

A Carnegie India report warns that escalating tensions in West Asia have exposed critical vulnerabilities in India's oil security framework. The nation's strategic petroleum reserves can only meet about eight weeks of demand, far less than other major Asian economies. Furthermore, India's refinery infrastructure is not flexible enough to easily process alternative crude grades without costly upgrades. The report recommends expanding reserves with private help, securing long-term contracts, and accelerating the shift to renewables to build long-term resilience.

Key Points: India's Oil Security Gaps Exposed by West Asia Crisis

  • Strategic reserves last only 8 weeks vs. 100+ days in Asia
  • Refineries need upgrades to process light-grade oil
  • Diversifying imports raises costs and logistics
  • Report calls for private sector role in storage
2 min read

India's oil security strategy faces structural gaps amid West Asia crisis: Carnegie India

Carnegie India report warns India's oil security is vulnerable. Strategic reserves lag behind Asia, refineries need upgrades, and diversification is costly.

"India requires higher onshore and offshore storage capacities, along with increased private participation - Carnegie India report"

New Delhi, April 14

India's oil security framework has come under renewed scrutiny following the escalation of tensions in West Asia in 2026, which disrupted global energy markets and exposed vulnerabilities in the country's import-dependent energy system, according to a report by Carnegie India.

The West Asia crisis has underscored the need for India to move beyond reactive measures and adopt a more resilient and forward-looking energy security framework.

The report highlights that India's current approach, based on opportunistic diversification and limited use of strategic reserves, remains inadequate to handle sustained supply shocks.

"India requires higher onshore and offshore storage capacities, along with increased private participation, in addition to alternative methods for meeting domestic demand," the report noted.

Currently, India's strategic petroleum reserves are estimated to sustain demand for about eight weeks in the event of a complete disruption. This is significantly lower compared to major Asian economies such as China (100 days), Japan (254 days), and South Korea (200 days), which maintain substantially larger stockpiles.

Additionally, India's refinery infrastructure is largely configured for medium-to-heavy crude grades, limiting flexibility in sourcing alternative supplies without significant technological upgrades.

The report notes, "Indian refineries will require modifications or infrastructural changes to process light-grade oil without blending. Such investments will be critical to sustain this in the long term."

Diversifying imports beyond West Asia to regions such as the United States, West Africa, and Latin America would also increase logistical costs and delivery timelines, posing additional economic challenges.

To address these structural gaps, the report recommends expanding strategic reserves, enhancing storage capacity with private sector participation, securing long-term supply contracts, and upgrading refinery capabilities.

In the long term, there is a need for a comprehensive energy transition strategy, including the accelerated adoption of renewable energy, electric vehicles, and biofuels, to reduce dependence on imported crude.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Absolutely right about the long-term solution being renewables. We have so much solar potential. Instead of just building more storage for imported oil, let's double down on green hydrogen, EVs, and solar. That's true aatmanirbharta. 🌞
R
Rohit P
The refinery upgrade point is crucial. We're locked into specific oil types. What's the plan and timeline for this? These are multi-year projects. Government and Reliance, IOC, others need to get moving with a clear roadmap.
S
Sarah B
While the report's analysis is solid, I respectfully think it underplays the immediate economic pain. Higher logistical costs from diversifying sources will be passed to consumers. Petrol prices are already a major political issue. There's no easy fix here.
V
Vikram M
Strategic reserves need private sector investment, but will companies invest without clear profitability? Government needs to create the right policy environment with incentives. Also, long-term contracts with US or African nations could stabilize prices.
M
Michael C
Interesting comparison with China's 100-day reserve. Their state-led model allows for massive strategic builds. India's public-private approach is different. The challenge is executing this complex coordination swiftly enough before the next crisis hits.
A
Ananya R
This isn't

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50