Key Points

Oil prices surged to a five-month high as US-Iran tensions raised fears of a Hormuz Strait closure. India’s petroleum minister assured stable fuel supplies, citing diversified imports from Russia and the US. Analysts warn that shutting the strait would hurt Iran and China more than other nations. Strategic reserves and alternate supply routes have strengthened India’s energy security.

Key Points: Oil prices hit 5-month high as Iran tensions threaten Hormuz Strait

  • Brent crude jumps 2.5% amid US-Iran tensions
  • India diversifies oil imports to reduce Hormuz Strait dependence
  • Hardeep Puri assures stable fuel supply despite Mideast crisis
  • Russia and US emerge as key alternate oil suppliers
3 min read

Oil prices at 5-month high amid Mideast crisis, India has enough supplies

Brent crude surges amid US-Iran tensions, but India assures stable fuel supplies with diversified oil sources and strategic reserves.

"The fact is that the closure of Hormuz Strait will harm Iran and Iran’s friend China more than anyone else. - VK Vijayakumar, Geojit Investments"

New Delhi, June 23

Oil prices rose to their highest level since January this year on Monday after the US strikes on nuclear facilities in Iran, with the country threatening to shut Strait of Hormuz, through which around 20 per cent of global crude supply flows.

Brent crude futures was up $1.92 or 2.49 per cent at $78.93 a barrel early on Monday. US West Texas Intermediate crude increased $1.89 or 2.56 per cent to $75.73.

Brent crude prices surged as much as 5 per cent. However, prices could not sustain at those levels and pared the early advance almost immediately.

Crude oil prices extended gains for a third straight week amid rising geopolitical tensions and a sharper-than-expected drawdown in US inventories.

The ongoing hostilities between Israel and Iran have heightened supply concerns across the Middle East, a region critical to global oil exports.

According to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), crude stockpiles dropped by 11.5 million barrels last week — significantly higher than the anticipated 2.3 million-barrel decline.

“Crude oil is seen having support at $74.20-73.40 and resistance at $75.65-76.20 in today’s session. In Rs terms, crude oil has support at Rs 6,400-6,320 while resistance is at Rs 6,580-6,690,” said Rahul Kalantri, VP Commodities, Mehta Equities Ltd.

Even though the possibility of the closure of Hormuz Strait is a threat, it is important to understand that this has always been only a threat and the Strait had never been closed.

“The fact is that the closure of Hormuz Strait will harm Iran and Iran’s friend China more than anyone else,” said VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist, Geojit Investments Limited.

Meanwhile, Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas, Hardeep Singh Puri, has allayed fears over any disruption in oil supplies to Indian consumers due to the Israel-Iran war and further escalation in geopolitical tensions in the Middle East because of US bombing of Iran’s nuclear sites.

“We have been closely monitoring the evolving geopolitical situation in the Middle East since the past two weeks. Under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, we have diversified our supplies in the past few years and a large volume of our supplies do not come through the Strait of Hormuz now,” the minister said.

He pointed out that the country’s oil marketing companies (Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum) have supplies for several weeks and continue to receive energy supplies from several routes.

“We will take all necessary steps to ensure stability of supplies of fuel to our citizens,” the minister assured.

India imports around 85 per cent of its crude oil requirement and a surge in oil prices leads to an increase in its oil import bill and pushes up the rate of inflation which hurts economic growth.

However, India has diversified its oil sources by increasing imports from Russia as well as the US and building resilience through strategic reserves.

—IANS

- IANS

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Reader Comments

Here are 5 diverse Indian perspective comments for the oil price article:
R
Rajesh K.
Good to see our government prepared for such situations. The strategic reserves and Russian oil deals are proving beneficial now. But still, rising prices will pinch common people's pockets - hope petrol pumps don't hike rates immediately 🙏
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Priya M.
Why does the Middle East always have to be unstable? Every time there's tension, we Indians suffer through higher fuel prices. Maybe it's time to seriously invest in renewable energy alternatives rather than depending on imported oil.
A
Amit S.
The minister's statement is reassuring, but I remember during COVID how fuel prices skyrocketed despite low global prices. Hope this time the government will actually pass on the benefits if prices stabilize soon. #JustSaying
S
Sunita R.
Smart move by India to diversify oil sources! The Russia deal was criticized initially but now it's proving to be a masterstroke. We need more such strategic partnerships to reduce dependence on any single region. 👍
V
Vikram J.
While the government claims we have enough supplies, the real test will be whether they can prevent price hikes at petrol pumps. Middle class is already struggling with inflation - another fuel price increase will be disastrous for household budgets.

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