Submitted:
06 May 2026
Posted:
28 May 2026
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. India in Context—The Third-Largest Consumer in a Multi-Giant World
3. LPG—The Most Critical Hormuz Vulnerability
3.1. Why LPG, Not Gasoline or Diesel?
3.2. The Cooking Fuel Dimension
3.3. Current Import Sources and Hormuz Exposure
3.4. Strategic Reserves—A Critical Gap
3.5. India’s Current Actions
3.6. Opportunities for Further Action
3.7. LPG Options—Priority, Cost, and Status
| Option | Timeframe | LPG Impact (Mt/yr) | Cost vs. Unsubsidized LPG | Hormuz Free? | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SUPPLY DIVERSIFICATION | |||||
| US + Australia LPG import expansion | 2–4 yrs | +3–5 Mt supply | ~0.85–1.0× | Yes (Cape/Indian Ocean) | IN PROGRESS |
| Russia Sakhalin LPG (Pacific route) | 2–5 yrs | +0.5–1.0 Mt | ~0.80–0.95× | Yes (Pacific Ocean — no chokepoints) | OPPORTUNITY (sanctions constraint) |
| Canada / Brazil / Mexico Americas LPG | 3–7 yrs | +0.5–1.5 Mt | ~0.90–1.05× | Yes (Cape/Pacific routes) | FUTURE OPPORTUNITY |
| DOMESTIC PRODUCTION | |||||
| Refinery LPG maximization (C3-C4 diversion) | Immediate | +3–4 Mt | ~0.6× | Partial | DONE |
| NGL extraction from domestic gas processing | 3-5 years | +1-2 Mt | ~0.6–0.8× | Yes | PARTIAL (see Appendix A.2) |
| Rich LNG / NGL extraction at terminals | 3–5 yrs | +1–3 Mt supply | ~0.7–0.85× | Yes (AU/US LNG) | OPPORTUNITY (see Appendix A.3) |
| Bio-LPG from HVO co-product | 1–3 yrs | +0.1–0.3 Mt | ~1.8–2.9× | Yes | PARTIAL |
| Bio-LPG from biomass gasification | 6–10 yrs | +0.5–2 Mt | ~1.8–3.1× | Yes | OPPORTUNITY |
| e-LPG (green hydrogen + CO2 synthesis) | 2035–2040 | Negligible near-term | ~3.0–6.0× | Yes | FUTURE |
| DEMAND SUBSTITUTION | |||||
| DME blending mandate (20%) — coal-based | 4–6 yrs | −3.5–4 Mt import demand | ~0.9–1.2× | Yes | IN PROGRESS |
| PNG transition — urban mandate | 3–8 yrs | −5–8 Mt demand | ~0.55× | Partial | IN PROGRESS (see Appendix A.1) |
| Electric induction cooking — urban commercial | 1–5 yrs | −6–10 Mt demand | ~0.25–0.40× | Yes | PARTIAL |
| LPG subsidy rationalization (demand reduction) | 3–8 yrs | −3–6 Mt demand (behavioral shift) | Enables PNG/induction switch | Yes (demand-side) | OPPORTUNITY — politically sensitive |
| STORAGE (BUFFER, NOT SUPPLY) | |||||
| Strategic LPG reserve – refrigerated tanks | 2–3 yrs | 30-45 day buffer | ~+0.05× (overhead) | N/A – buys time | OPPORTUNITY |
| Strategic LPG reserve – underground rock/salt caverns | 7-10 years | 90 day buffer | ~+0.05× (overhead) |
N/A – buys time | OPPORTUNITY |
4. Natural Gas and LNG—Serious But Manageable
4.1. India’s Natural Gas Consumption Profile
4.2. Hormuz Exposure—Better Positioned than LPG
4.3. The Fertilizer Sector—India’s Most Critical Gas Use
4.4. Domestic Natural Gas Production—Status and Challenges
- KG Basin deepwater (41% of reserves): The KG-D6 collapse from 60 million metric standard cubic meters per day (MMSCMD) peak (2010) to near-zero (2014) — caused by unexpected aquifer water incursion and sand production in turbidite reservoirs — remains the most consequential upstream failure in Indian energy history. Production is recovering via R-series (~14 MMSCMD), Satellite Cluster, and MJ fields (~8 MMSCMD), now producing ~30 MMSCMD — still only half of peak.
- Mumbai Offshore (24% of reserves): ONGC’s legacy Bassein and Bombay High fields are declining at 5–7%/yr. At ~$3–4/MMBtu (million British thermal units) domestic cost versus $12–14/MMBtu for imported LNG, these are the lowest-cost gas sources in India — arresting decline through enhanced recovery represents the highest return-per-dollar gas investment available domestically.
- Tripura (~400 BCM discovered but isolated): No pipeline to major demand centers exists. A significant infrastructure gap whose resolution could unlock substantial domestic supply.
- Coal Bed Methane (CBM, ~106 BCM recoverable): CBM involves extracting natural gas that is adsorbed within coal seams. The primary extraction technique is dewatering — reducing water pressure in the seam allows the methane to desorb and flow to the surface. Unlike shale gas extraction, CBM in India’s geological context generally does not require hydraulic fracturing (fracking); dewatering alone is typically sufficient, though stimulation techniques may be used in lower-permeability seams. Significant reserves exist in Damodar Valley (Jharkhand, West Bengal) and Sohagpur (Madhya Pradesh), but output remains only ~2 BCM/yr despite a recoverable potential of 87 BCM/yr — largely due to the time and capital required for the dewatering phase before commercial gas flow begins.
4.5. India’s Current Actions—Natural Gas
- KG Basin R-series recovery: Reliance Industries/BP and ONGC have invested ~$7 billion in new deepwater wells since 2020. Production recovering from near-zero to ~30 MMSCMD.
- LNG import diversification: US LNG now 20% of imports (from near-zero in 2017); Australia 7%; Oman 5%; Angola 7%. Qatar declining in relative share. Combined non-Hormuz LNG supply is ~47% of imports.
- CBG blending mandate: Mandatory 1% Compressed Biogas (CBG) blend in city gas from FY2025-26, rising to 5% by FY2028-29. 90 plants operational, 508 under development.
- Coal gasification for gas and fertilizers: Talcher Fertilizers Limited (Rs 13,277 crore, or ~$1.6 billion, GAIL/CIL/RCF/FCIL JV) — coal-to-urea plant over 50% complete; CIL-GAIL SNG JV (Rs 13,053 crore, or ~$1.6 billion, SonepurBazari, West Bengal) for 1.83 MMSMD of synthetic natural gas by FY29; Rs 8,500 crore (~$1.0 billion) VGF scheme; National Coal Gasification Mission targeting 100 MT by 2030.
- Golden Pass LNG (US, 2027): New 16 MTPA terminal coming online from 2027-28 will significantly expand non-Hormuz US LNG supply capacity available to India.
4.6. Opportunities for Further Action—Natural Gas
4.7. Natural Gas Options—Priority, Cost, and Status
5. Crude Oil—Deepest Import Dependence, Improving Diversification
5.1. Import Profile and Hormuz Exposure
5.2. Current Actions—Crude Oil
- Supplier diversification to 40 countries: India now imports crude from approximately 40 countries, up from 27 in 2006-07, giving procurement flexibility that LPG does not have.
- Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR): Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Limited (ISPRL) holds approximately 5.33 MMT of crude oil at three underground rock cavern sites — Visakhapatnam, Mangaluru, and Padur — representing approximately 9.5 days of import coverage.
- Ethanol blending (E20 program): India’s ethanol blending reached 14.6% in ESY 2023-24 and has consistently exceeded 19.5% since January 2025. E20 (20% ethanol in petrol) saves approximately $4 billion annually in crude imports. India produces ethanol primarily from sugar-based feedstocks (sugarcane juice, B-heavy and C-heavy molasses) and grain-based sources (surplus rice and damaged food grains from Food Corporation of India (FCI) stocks, and maize). The National Biofuel Policy has progressively expanded permitted feedstocks to include cellulosic ethanol from agricultural residue, though this technology is not yet at commercial scale in India.
- Electric vehicles (EVs): India aims for 30% EV penetration by 2030 under the FAME-II (Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Hybrid and Electric Vehicles) scheme. The two-wheeler (2W) fleet of ~200 million vehicles represents the largest near-term opportunity for petrol demand displacement.
- Biodiesel blending: India has a 5% biodiesel blending target by 2030. Procurement reached 489 million liters in 2024, but this remains less than 1% of diesel consumption. Used cooking oil (UCO) is the most viable feedstock.
5.3. Opportunities for Further Action—Crude Oil
5.4. Diversification Strategy—Current Status and Direction
6. Oil and Gas Derived Critical Products—Fertilizers, Jet Fuel, and Helium
6.1. Fertilizers—The Food Security Dimension
6.2. Helium—A Newly Exposed Critical Material
- Long-term supply contracts with US producers (Air Products, Linde, Air Liquide — distributing from Wyoming and Kansas fields). US helium exports route via Cape of Good Hope with zero Hormuz or Bab el-Mandeb exposure. Treating this as a strategic material procurement rather than a commodity purchase could substantially improve India’s resilience.
- Mandating helium recycling systems at all new MRI installations and at semiconductor fabs under India’s Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme. Helium recovery systems capture boil-off gas and reliquefy it, reducing per-machine consumption by 70–90%.
- Helium-free sealed MRI systems for new government and public hospital builds. Siemens Healthineers and GE Healthcare both produce sealed MRI systems requiring minimal helium top-up over their lifetime. VoxelGrids, an Indian startup, is also developing a helium-free MRI scanner — a domestically relevant option for this strategic vulnerability.
6.3. Aviation Turbine Fuel—A Price Crisis, Not a Supply Crisis
- SAF (Sustainable Aviation Fuel) development: IndianOil has India’s first commercial-scale SAF plant underway at Panipat refinery. India’s biofuel roadmap includes SAF targets of 1% blend by 2027, rising to 5% by 2030. Even at 5% blend, conventional ATF dependence remains at 95%, but SAF provides partial insulation from crude price shocks.
- Crude oil strategic reserves: Since ATF’s price is fundamentally driven by crude oil cost, maintaining 30–45 days of strategic crude reserves (vs. India’s current 9.5 days) would buffer ATF price spikes during supply disruptions.
- Refinery SEZ framework — actions taken and next step: The April 2026 concessional domestic sales rules and the 158% diesel export duty hike (Rs 21.5 → Rs 55.5/liter) are positive first steps that demonstrate indirect levers can be effective. The longer-term structural opportunity is to embed mandatory emergency domestic supply triggers directly into new and renewed SEZ refinery operating licenses — so that future crises activate automatic obligations rather than requiring improvised duty adjustments under pressure.
- Coal-to-liquids (FT synthesis): Synthetic jet fuel from Fischer-Tropsch processing of coal gasification syngas could provide a domestic, crude-independent source of ATF in extreme crisis scenarios.
7. Coal—India’s Most Secure Fossil Fuel, with Important Exceptions
7.1. Structural Strength
7.2. Import Sources and Risk Profiles
7.3. Coal Gasification—Strategic Technology for Import Substitution
- Urea/ammonia: Talcher Fertilizers Limited (Rs 13,277 crore, or ~$1.6 billion, Odisha) — coal-to-urea plant gasifying 2.5 Mt/yr of coal to produce 1.27 Mt/yr urea. Over 50% complete. Directly replaces LNG feedstock for fertilizers with domestic coal.
- SNG: CIL-GAIL JV, SonepurBazari (Rs 13,053 crore, or ~$1.6 billion) — 1.83 MMSMD of pipeline-quality methane from coal by FY29. Directly substitutes for imported LNG in city gas networks.
- Methanol: NLC India lignite-to-methanol (Neyveli, by 2027). India imports >90% of methanol (~4 Mt/yr) — domestic production reduces import dependence.
- DME: Methanol → DME. BIS notified 20% DME-LPG blending standard. 8% national blend = ~2.5 Mt/yr LPG import displacement. Domestic coal feedstock — fully Hormuz-immune.
- DRI for steel: JSPL Angul (operational) and CIL-SAIL JV Durgapur (in development) use coal gasification syngas to reduce iron ore — replacing imported coking coal with domestic thermal coal.
7.4. Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage (CCUS) for Coal Gasification
8. Electrification Impact—The Enabling Layer, and the AI Demand Challenge
8.1. AI and Data Centers—A New and Growing Electricity Demand
9. Overall Import Vulnerability Assessment
9.1. The Cascade Architecture of India’s Energy Security
- LPG (92% Hormuz) → PNG/LNG (53% Hormuz): Switching households from LPG cylinders to piped natural gas reduces chokepoint exposure from 92% to 53%. The government’s 2026 mandatory PNG order has accelerated this transition.
- LNG (53% Hormuz) → Coal gasification SNG (0% Hormuz): Converting the gas grid to include SNG from domestic coal gasification removes LNG import dependency for the city gas network. The CIL-GAIL SNG project at SonepurBazari is the first step in this cascade.
- Fertilizer gas (LNG, 53% Hormuz) → Coal gasification ammonia (0% Hormuz): Talcher Fertilizers replaces gas-based ammonia with coal-based ammonia. Long-term, green hydrogen from solar replaces coal, achieving zero fossil fuel dependency for the most critical gas use.
- Crude oil (46% Hormuz) → Ethanol + EVs + Coal-to-liquids: Progressively reduces crude oil consumption across petrol (ethanol, EVs), diesel (biodiesel, EVs for 2W/3W/bus), and jet fuel (SAF).
- Coking coal (85–90% imported, no Hormuz) → Coal gasification DRI + EAF: Replaces imported coking coal with domestic thermal coal via DRI route, then scrap-based EAF, then green hydrogen DRI.
- Electrification → Additional base-load electricity demand: As induction cooking, EVs, and green hydrogen electrolyzers scale, electricity demand rises sharply. AI-driven data center growth compounds this, adding tens of GW of highly reliable power demand that cannot be served by variable renewables alone. This reinforces the case for nuclear, hydro, and coal-with-CCUS base-load expansion.
9.2. Comparative Risk Across Fossil Fuels
- LPG: Most critical. 60–64% import dependent; 92% of imports via Hormuz; 1.5–2 days strategic reserve; structural shortfall of 9–11 Mt/yr in dual closure. 330 million households directly affected.
- Crude oil: Deepest absolute dependence (89%; 243 Mt/yr; ~$140 billion annually). Hormuz exposure improving to ~30% via Russia Cape route and Americas/Africa diversification. Strategic petroleum reserve critically inadequate at 9.5 days.
- LNG/Natural Gas: Serious but manageable. 50% import dependent; 53% of LNG via Hormuz; 10 days terminal buffer. Fertilizer sector (21 BCM/yr) is most critical and least substitutable — food security at stake.
- Coal: Least acute on Hormuz dimension. 81% self-sufficient; zero Hormuz exposure; domestic production crossing 1 billion tonnes. Indonesia 60% thermal coal concentration carries a latent Malacca Strait risk of a qualitatively different nature. Coking coal (85–90% imported) requires steel industry transformation.
9.3. The Compound Vulnerability—Why This Crisis Was Different
9.4. Strategic Reserve Comparison—India vs. China
10. Conclusions and Policy Recommendations
10.1. Immediate Priorities (0–24 months)
- Build refrigerated LPG atmospheric tanks at Ennore (east coast) and Visakhapatnam — 18–24-month build time; 0.5–0.7 Mt of emergency buffer. Fastest path to meaningful LPG storage.
- Procure and moor 2–3 Floating Storage Units (FSUs) at Dahej, Ennore, or Kochi for 0.2–0.3 Mt / ~0.4 BCM of LNG buffer — deployable in 6–12 months at $60–120 million each.
- Accelerate US and Australian LPG contracts to 3–4 MTPA total non-Hormuz supply. Australia (9 days transit) is worth prioritizing alongside US (35 days). Evaluate Sakhalin-2 LPG (Pacific route, 10–12 days to east coast) for spot and term contracting under India’s strategic autonomy framework.
- Commission feasibility studies for NGL extraction units at Dahej and Ennore LNG terminals — highest-impact unexploited LPG supply opportunity.
- Initiate Canadian LNG contracting discussions — LNG Canada (Kitimat, BC) is operational and represents a Pacific-route, chokepoint-free LNG source not yet utilized by India.
- Establish long-term helium supply contracts with US producers (Air Products, Linde, Air Liquide) treating helium as a strategic material; mandate helium recycling at new MRI and semiconductor facility installations.
- Fast-track PNG Drive 2.0; maintain mandatory PNG switchover; accelerate induction cooktop subsidies for urban Below Poverty Line (BPL) and lower-middle-income households.
- Begin permitting and geological surveys for new LPG rock caverns at Kakinada and Tuticorin — starting the 5–7-year construction clock promptly will be critical.
- Mandate capture and supply of propane co-product from all HVO production facilities to the national LPG pool — a near-zero-cost addition to non-Hormuz LPG supply.
- Develop a pre-announced, phased LPG subsidy rationalization roadmap — for example, Rs 50 per cylinder per quarter over 3 years, paired with simultaneous BPL induction cooktop and PNG connection subsidies — to redirect consumer incentives toward cheaper, Hormuz-immune cooking alternatives.
- Incorporate AI-driven data center demand growth explicitly into national grid expansion planning; identify sites and transmission corridors for hyperscale data center precincts requiring dispatchable power.
10.2. Medium-Term Priorities (2–8 years)
- Build 3–4 Mt LPG strategic reserve through combined refrigerated tanks and underground rock/salt caverns.
- Expand LNG terminal storage to 2–3 Mt / 2.7–4 BCM; build Paradip east coast LNG terminal — critical for receiving Indian Ocean and Pacific (non-Hormuz) cargoes from Australia, Mozambique, Canada, and Russia.
- Accelerate Phase II crude oil SPR construction — Chandi Khol (4 MMT) and Padur (2.5 MMT); approved 2021 but unbuilt.
- Develop Atlantic Basin crude supply bloc: establish long-term supply agreements with Guyana (Stabroek block) and expand Brazil (Petrobras pre-salt) — both Cape-routed, chokepoint-free, and growing in output capacity.
- Commission India’s first commercial DME plant (1–2 Mt/yr) and introduce 10–20% DME blend mandate.
- Scale CBG production to 5 BCM/yr by 2030 — fully domestic, Hormuz-immune gas supply.
- Install NGL extraction units at Dahej and Ennore — produce domestic LPG from rich Australian/US LNG.
- Arrest Mumbai Offshore gas production decline through enhanced recovery investment — highest return-per-dollar gas security opportunity.
- Expand long-term phosphate rock contracts with Morocco’s OCP and potash contracts with Canada — routing via chokepoint-free ocean lanes; expand sulfur contracts with Canadian and US suppliers.
- Implement a three-tier LPG pricing structure: retain the existing PMUY subsidy (Rs 300/cylinder) for below-poverty-line households (Tier 1); maintain current market pricing for middle-income consumers (Tier 2); and introduce a graduated duty or energy security surcharge on LPG for higher-income households (Tier 3) — making LPG more expensive than induction or PNG alternatives for those most able to switch, without touching the welfare architecture for those who cannot.
- Build on April 2026 SEZ workarounds (concessional domestic sales rules and 158% diesel export duty hike) by pursuing structural reform: embed emergency domestic supply triggers into SEZ refinery operating licenses, so that future crises activate automatic domestic supply obligations rather than requiring improvised duty adjustments after the fact.
- Establish a state-backed coking coal procurement consortium; explore long-term HCC contracts with Canada and Australia; evaluate potential Indian equity in Mozambique Tete Basin coal assets.
- Reduce solar supply chain dependence on China through PLI-backed domestic module manufacturing — a critical vulnerability in the electrification pathway.
10.3. Long-Term Structural Transformation (8–20 years)
- Green hydrogen for fertilizers: Replace SMR-based hydrogen in urea plants with electrolysis using India’s abundant solar resources — the single most transformative step for reducing the 21 BCM/yr fertilizer gas dependency.
- EV transition: Accelerate 2W, 3W, and bus electrification — directly reduces CNG/petrol/diesel demand and crude oil import dependency.
- SAF at scale: Scale Sustainable Aviation Fuel production toward 5% blend target by 2030 and 15–20% by 2040 — reducing ATF crude oil dependence progressively.
- Coal gasification with CCUS: Expand Talcher urea, CIL-GAIL SNG, and JSPL DRI model with Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage (CCUS) infrastructure. Developing a CCS policy framework modeled on the US 45Q tax credit, and evaluating KG Basin depleted reservoirs and Gondwana saline aquifers for CO2 geological storage, could be important enablers.
- Steel industry transformation: Scale coal gasification DRI and scrap-based EAF to reduce coking coal import dependence — a 30% EAF share by 2035 is a plausible target.
- 500 GW renewable target: Reduces coal and gas demand in power generation; as grid decarbonizes, induction cooking achieves genuine lifecycle carbon advantage over LPG and PNG.
- Thorium nuclear program: Progress the three-stage nuclear program toward the thorium fuel cycle — ultimately one of the most strategically sovereign electricity sources available to India.
10.4. The Fundamental Strategic Insight
Acknowledgments
Appendix A. Investment Analyses
Appendix A.1. PNG Transition Investments
Appendix A.2. Domestic Gas Processing NGL Extraction Upgrades—Investments
Appendix A.3. Import Terminal NGL Extraction—Investments
Appendix A.4. Reserve Building Program—Investments
References
- Kiel Institute for the World Economy (2024/2025). Energy and Food Security Report — Global Supply Chain Vulnerabilities and the Developing World. Kiel.
- Narayan Ramachandran, Dr Y Nithiyanandam, ``Geopolitics of LPG Supply in Indiaʹʹ, Takshashila Issue Brief 2026-04, Version 1.0, March 2026., The Takshashila Institution.
- India Today (March 31, 2026). ‘LPG, PNG, LNG, CNG: India’s transition and energy crisis import dependence.’ indiatoday.in. https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/india-lpg-png-lng-cng-transition-energy-crisis-import-dependence-2889609-2026-03-31.
- Anupam Manur, Anisree Suresh, ``Policy Responses to India’s LPG Supply Crisis’’, Takshashila Report 2026-07., Version 1.0, March 2026.
- Times of India (April 2026). ‘DME: Scientists look to scale up output to offset LPG supply blow.’ timesofindia.com.
- Seshadri, Swathi (IEEFA). March 31, 2026. ‘India’s petrochemical industry and the realities of a fragile supply chain.’ Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis. ieefa.org.
- PSU Watch (April 2026). ‘New report pitches coal gasification as geopolitical insurance for India against oil, LPG shocks amid Hormuz risks.’ psuwatch.com.
- Das, Nandini (Climate Analytics). April 2, 2026. ‘Breaking the cycle of energy shocks: India’s renewable opportunity.’ Climate Analytics / Climate Action Tracker. climateanalytics.org.
- Aparna Roy, “Beyond Hormuz: Why India’s Energy Security Must Be Built by Its States”, Observer Research Foundation, April 30, 2026.
- Energy Institute (2025). Statistical Review of World Energy 2025. London.
- IEA (2025). India Energy Outlook 2025. International Energy Agency. Paris.
- EIA (2020). Residential Energy Consumption Survey (RECS) 2020. US Energy Information Administration. Washington, DC.
- In Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell (PPAC), MoPNG Ready Reckoner — Indian Petroleum & Natural Gas Statistics 2024-25; Government of India: New Delhi, 2025; 13. Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell (PPAC), MoPNG (2025). Ready Reckoner — Indian Petroleum & Natural Gas Statistics 2024-25. Government of India, New Delhi.
- In S&P Global Commodity Insights India LPG and LNG Supply Chain Risk: Hormuz Closure Impact Assessment; Singapore, March 2026; 14. S&P Global Commodity Insights (March 2026). India LPG and LNG Supply Chain Risk: Hormuz Closure Impact Assessment. Singapore.
- Drewry Maritime Research (March 2026). Gas Tanker Shipping Market Report. London.
- Press Information Bureau, Government of India (March 2026). Natural Gas and Petroleum Products Distribution Order, 2026. MoPNG Press Release, March 24, 2026.
- Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH), MoPNG (2025). Hydrocarbon Exploration and Production Activities — India: Annual Report 2024-25. New Delhi.
- Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board (PNGRB) (2025). Annual Report 2024-25. New Delhi.
- IEA (2024). India’s Compressed Biogas Sector: Potential and Policy Framework. Paris.
- Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (March 2026). Press Briefing: India’s Crude Oil Import Diversification and Hormuz Exposure. New Delhi.
- Observer Research Foundation (ORF) (March 2026). India’s Crude Oil Import Diversification: Strategy for a Post-Hormuz World. ORF Energy Initiative, New Delhi.
- IEA (2025). Coal 2025: Analysis and Forecast. International Energy Agency. Paris.
- Ministry of Coal, Government of India (2024). Annual Report on India’s Coal Production and Imports 2024-25. New Delhi.
- Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Limited (ISPRL) (2026). Strategic Petroleum Reserve Annual Report 2025-26. Visakhapatnam.
- Cedigaz (2024). World Natural Gas Storage Report December 2024. Paris.
- IEA (2024). Coal Mid-Year Update July 2024. International Energy Agency. Paris.
- USGS (2024). Assessment of Undiscovered Conventional Oil and Gas Resources of India and Sri Lanka. USGS Fact Sheet 2024-3015. Reston, VA.
- Norwegian Offshore Directorate (2025). Norwegian Continental Shelf Resource Report 2025. Stavanger.
- Coal India Limited (CIL) (2024). National Coal Gasification Mission: Progress Report and VGF Scheme Notification. MoCoal, January 2024. New Delhi.
- Ministry of Fertilizers, Government of India (2025). Annual Report 2024-25. New Delhi.
- IPCC (2022). Climate Change 2022: Mitigation of Climate Change. Contribution of Working Group III. Cambridge University Press.
- IATA (March 2026). Aviation Fuel Price Impact Report: Hormuz Crisis. International Air Transport Association. Geneva.
- PSU Watch / Business Standard (April 2026). ‘Windfall tax on diesel, ATF exports not applicable to Reliance’s SEZ refinery.’ Supplemented by: Ministry of Commerce notification, April 1, 2026 (concessional SEZ domestic sales rules); Ministry of Finance notification, April 2026 (diesel export duty hike: Rs 21.5 → Rs 55.5/liter).
- Gasworld / S&P Global (March 2026). Helium Supply Crisis: Qatar Force Majeure and Global Shortage Assessment.
- Narayan Ramachandran, Dr Y Nithiyanandam, Anupam Manur, ``Geopolitics of Fertiliser Supply in Indiaʹʹ, Takshashila Issue Brief 2026-11, Version 1.0, March 2026.
| Energy Source | India Rank | India % of world | US Rank | US % of world | China Rank | China % of world |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coal (~165 EJ/yr) | #2 | ~14% | #3 | ~5% | #1 | ~56% |
| Oil / Petroleum (~180 EJ/yr) | #3 | ~5.5% | #1 | ~19% | #2 | ~16% |
| Natural Gas (~145 EJ/yr) | #10 | ~2% | #1 | ~22% | #3 | ~9% |
| Renewables (~90 EJ/yr) | #4 | ~5–6% | #2 | ~16% | #1 | ~30% |
| Nuclear (~30 EJ/yr) | #7 | ~1% | #1 | ~31% | #3 | ~14% |
| Total Primary (~620 EJ/yr) | #3 | ~6% | #2 | ~16% | #1 | ~27% |
| Fuel / Method | India | China | United States |
|---|---|---|---|
| LPG cylinder | ~60% | ~25–30% (rural) | ~4% (rural/off-grid) |
| Piped natural gas (PNG) | ~1–2% (urban only) | ~45–50%(urban dominant) | ~31% |
| Electric resistive | <1% | ~10–12% | ~54% |
| Induction electric | <1% (nascent) | ~8–10% (growing fast) | ~5% (growing) |
| Solid fuels (wood, dung, coal) | ~33% (rural poor) | ~10–15% (rural) | Negligible |
| Supplier | Share | Transit Days | Primary Route | Chokepoint | Key Constraints / Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UAE | ~40.5% | 4–5 days | Arabian Sea direct | HORMUZ | Entire supply at risk; dominant supplier rose from 22% (2019) to 40.5% (2024-25) |
| Qatar | ~22% | 5–6 days | Arabian Sea direct | HORMUZ | Declining from 31% in 2019; Ras Laffan terminal; Petronet LNG relationship |
| Saudi Arabia | ~15% | 5–15 days | Hormuz (Jubail) or Red Sea/Bab el-Mandeb (Yanbu) | Hormuz or Bab el-Mandeb | Jubail exports via Hormuz; Yanbu (Red Sea) via Bab el-Mandeb — Houthi attacks since 2024 have made Red Sea route high-risk, pushing most cargoes back to Hormuz |
| Kuwait | ~14% | 5 days | Arabian Sea direct | HORMUZ | Mina Abdullah terminal; Kuwait Petroleum Corporation; entire supply at risk |
| USA | ~6% | 31–35 days (Cape) / 22–25 days (Suez)* | Cape of Good Hope (current) or Suez Canal (pre-Houthi) | None via Cape; Bab el-Mandeb via Suez | Mont Belvieu, Texas; 2.2 MTPA contracted Feb 2026; propane-rich mix vs. India’s butane preference. *Suez route is shorter but suspended by most operators since Houthi attacks (2024) |
| Australia | ~3–5% | 9 days | Indian Ocean direct | None | Best non-Hormuz proximity; NW Shelf and Queensland LNG terminals also export LPG; most NGL committed to Japan/Korea; volume ceiling ~1.5 Mt/yr currently but expandable |
| Russia (Sakhalin) | <1% (nascent) | 10–12 days (Pacific/Indian Ocean) | Pacific Ocean → Indian Ocean (east coast India) | None | Sakhalin-2 (Sakhalin Energy, Sakhalin Island, Russian Far East) produces and exports propane and butane; Pacific route bypasses all Middle East chokepoints entirely; sanctions risk limits contracting; India receiving spot volumes; potential to grow to 0.5–1.0 Mt/yr under long-term arrangement |
| Oman | ~2–3% | 3–4 days | Gulf of Oman direct | None — bypasses Hormuz | Only Gulf producer whose LPG exports route entirely around Hormuz via the Gulf of Oman; Salalah and Sohar terminals; strategically valuable despite limited volumes |
| Algeria / Others | ~1–2% | 10–22 days | Mediterranean/Red Sea or Cape | Bab el-Mandeb (if Red Sea) or None (Cape) | Small diversification value; Algeria exports via Red Sea (Bab el-Mandeb risk) or Cape; other minor suppliers include Trinidad and Norway (spot) [28] |
| Scenario | Days Covered | Raw Reserve Needed | With 1.4× Safety Buffer | Current vs. Required |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hormuz only — sustained alternative flow | 45 days | ~2.25 Mt | ~3–4 Mt | 0.14 Mt actual — gap: ~3 Mt |
| Hormuz + Bab el-Mandeb — dual closure | 70 days | ~3.5 Mt | ~5–6 Mt | 0.14 Mt actual — gap: ~5 Mt |
| IEA-equivalent strategic reserve | 90 days | ~4.5 Mt | ~6.3 Mt | 0.14 Mt actual — gap: ~6 Mt |
| Sector | BCM/yr | Share | Substitutability | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fertilizers | ~21 | 30% | Very hard | Gas is chemical feedstock (hydrogen) for Haber-Bosch; food security at stake; coal gasification and green hydrogen offer domestic alternatives — see Section 6.1 |
| City Gas Distribution (CGD): CNG + PNG | ~13.5 | 19% | Moderate | EVs replace compressed natural gas (CNG) long-term; induction replaces PNG cooking; CBG blending mandate in place |
| Power Generation | ~9.1 | 13% | Easiest | Gas power shifting to flexible backup/peaking role; solar already lower-cost; 31 GW installed but <2% of electricity generation |
| Refineries | ~8.0 | 11% | Moderate | Furnace fuel and hydrogen for hydroprocessing; gas use grew 70% YoY in FY2024 |
| Petrochemicals | ~6.2 | 9% | Hard | Methanol, ethylene, propylene feedstock; naphtha or coal-derived methanol offer alternative feedstocks in a crisis |
| Industry (other) | ~1.0 | 1.4% | Moderate | Coal backup available in crisis; IEA projects +15 BCM/yr by 2030 |
| LNG as transport fuel | ~1.5 | 2% | Easy long-term | High growth potential; India has ~3,500 LNG trucks vs. China’s ~800,000+ |
| TOTAL | ~71.3 | 100% | 2030 IEA forecast: 103 BCM/yr — LNG imports must double to ~65 BCM/yr |
| Option | Timeframe | Gas Impact (BCM/yr) | Hormuz-Free? | Cost vs. LNG | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protect Mumbai Offshore production | Immediate | Prevent −2 BCM/yr decline | Fully domestic | ~0.3–0.5× | URGENT |
| Expand Oman LNG contracts | Immediate–2 yrs | +0.7–1.2 BCM/yr | Yes — Gulf of Oman bypass | ~0.9–1.1× | IN PROGRESS |
| Accelerate KG Basin deepwater (R-series, MJ) | 2–5 yrs | +3–7 BCM/yr | Fully domestic | ~0.4–0.6× | IN PROGRESS |
| Expand Australia LNG contracts | 2–4 yrs | +2–5 BCM/yr | Yes — Indian Ocean | ~1.0–1.2× | IN PROGRESS |
| Expand US LNG contracts (Golden Pass by 2027) | 2–4 yrs | +5–10 BCM/yr | Yes — Cape route (Suez suspended) | ~1.1–1.3× | IN PROGRESS |
| Canada LNG Canada (Pacific route — Kitimat, BC) | 3–6 yrs | +2–5 BCM/yr | Yes — Pacific Ocean (no chokepoints) | ~1.0–1.2× | OPPORTUNITY — not yet contracted |
| Russia Sakhalin-2 LNG (Pacific route) | Immediate–3 yrs | +1–3 BCM/yr | Yes — Pacific Ocean (no chokepoints) | ~0.85–1.0× | PARTIAL — sanctions constraint; spot volumes ongoing |
| LNG strategic reserve (FSU + terminal tanks) | 6 months–3 yrs | Buffer: 2–4 BCM | Yes | ~+0.04× overhead | OPPORTUNITY |
| Mozambique LNG (Coral South + future Rovuma) | 3–7 yrs | +2–4 BCM/yr | Yes — Indian Ocean | ~0.9–1.1× | IN PROGRESS |
| Scale CBM production (Damodar Valley) | 3–7 yrs | +2–4 BCM/yr | Fully domestic | ~0.5–0.7× | PARTIAL |
| Scale Compressed Biogas (CBG) | 2–5 yrs | +2–5 BCM/yr | Fully domestic | ~0.8–1.2× | IN PROGRESS |
| Coal gasification → SNG / fertilizer gas | 5–10 yrs | −5–15 BCM LNG demand | Fully domestic | ~0.8–1.0× | IN PROGRESS |
| Green hydrogen for fertilizers | 2030–2040 | −10–21 BCM/yr long-term | Fully domestic | 3–5× currently | FUTURE |
| Supplier | Share (2024) | Mb/d | Chokepoint / Route | Key Issues and Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Russia | ~36% | 1.80 | None — Cape of Good Hope | Rose from <1% (2021); Urals ~$5/bbl discount; US sanctions pressure; 36% single-supplier concentration risk; Nayara/Reliance primary buyers; Arctic crude (ESPO) also via Pacific route |
| Iraq | ~21% | 1.02 | HORMUZ | India buys ~30% of Iraq’s total exports; Basrah crude suits India’s refineries; fully Hormuz-exposed |
| Saudi Arabia | ~13% | 0.64 | Primarily Hormuz (Jubail) or Bab el-Mandeb (Yanbu Red Sea — high-risk since 2024) | Long-term strategic relationship; Saudi Aramco seeks Indian refinery stakes; Yanbu bypass limited by Houthi attacks |
| UAE | ~9% | 0.45 | Hormuz (ADNOC Ruwais) or Habshan-Fujairah bypass pipeline | ADNOC strategic partnership; Habshan-Fujairah pipeline can bypass Hormuz for ~30% of UAE crude; Fujairah export terminal attacked in 2026 |
| United States | ~4–9% | 0.17–0.44 | None — Cape of Good Hope (or Suez pre-Houthi) | Surged 300%+ in 2025 under trade pressure; light sweet crude (WTI, Eagle Ford); growing under India-US framework; primarily Cape route since Houthi attacks |
| Kuwait | ~3% | ~0.15 | HORMUZ | Steady long-term supplier; heavy sour crude suits complex Indian refineries |
| Guyana | ~1–2% (growing) | ~0.05–0.10 | None — Atlantic/Cape of Good Hope | Stabroek block (ExxonMobil/Hess/CNOOC): output growing rapidly toward 1.2 Mb/d by 2027; sweet, low-sulfur crude; no geopolitical risk; India is actively exploring supply agreements; transit via Cape ~28 days |
| Brazil | ~2–3% | ~0.10–0.15 | None — Atlantic/Cape of Good Hope | Petrobras pre-salt (Lula, Buzios fields): heavy sweet crude suited to complex refineries; established India supplier; growing; ~30 days transit via Cape; no chokepoint risk |
| Mexico | <1% (potential) | Negligible | None — Atlantic/Cape of Good Hope | Pemex Maya crude: heavy sour, suits Indian refineries; Pemex export capacity constrained by domestic refinery expansion; potential spot supplier; ~35 days via Cape |
| Others (Nigeria, Angola, Kazakhstan, Norway, Oman) | ~18% | ~0.87 | Mostly none | India now sources from ~40 countries; African crudes (Nigeria, Angola) via Cape; Oman is the only Gulf producer whose crude naturally bypasses Hormuz via Gulf of Oman |
| Supplier | Share | Coal Type | Chokepoint | Risk Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indonesia | ~60% thermal | Thermal (sub-bituminous) | Malacca Strait | Dangerous 60% concentration; threatened domestic-priority export ban Jan 2022. Indonesia’s coal routing to India requires clarification: coal from South Kalimantan (the dominant production region) typically routes via the Java Sea and Sunda Strait to the Indian Ocean, while East Kalimantan coal routes via the Makassar Strait — neither necessarily transiting the Malacca Strait. Sumatra coal (a smaller share) may route via or near Malacca. The more immediate and demonstrated risk is Indonesian domestic policy: the January 2022 export ban, and Indonesia’s Domestic Market Obligation (DMO) requiring miners to sell 25% of output domestically at capped prices, represent policy-driven supply risk that is more likely to materialize than any maritime chokepoint threat. Diversification toward Indian Ocean routes (South Africa, Colombia, Mozambique) addresses both the concentration risk and the routing vulnerability simultaneously. |
| South Africa | ~16% thermal | Thermal (bituminous) | None — Indian Ocean | Strong strategic candidate; ~13 days transit; Richards Bay = world’s largest coal export port; scope to grow to 25–30% |
| Australia | ~8% thermal, ~55–60% coking | Both — premium Hard Coking Coal (HCC) | None — Indian Ocean | World’s largest coking coal exporter; Bowen Basin HCC is global benchmark |
| United States | ~15% coking | Coking (Appalachian HCC) | None — Cape route | High quality; surged 18% FY24; under US-India trade pressure; 35–40 days voyage |
| Canada | ~6% coking | Coking (BC hard coking) | None — Pacific/Indian Ocean | High quality; Pacific route; Teck Resources; +15% FY24 |
| Russia | ~6–8% mixed | Both | Malacca / Pacific | Discounted post-Ukraine; sanctions risk |
| Colombia | ~4–5% thermal | Thermal (high CV bituminous) | None — Cape route | Premium quality; no geopolitical risk; ~25–30 days; worth expanding |
| Mozambique | ~3–4% coking | Coking (Tete Basin HCC) | None — Indian Ocean | Only ~7 days to India’s east coast; Vale and Vulcan Resources; Nacala corridor improving |
| Fuel | India (Current) | China (Comparison) | IEA / Recommended Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crude Oil | ~9.5 days (5.33 MMT at 3 sites) | 96–120 days (~1.2 bn bbl combined) | 90 days minimum |
| LPG | ~1.5–2 days (0.14 Mt at 2 caverns) | N/A — net exporter | 30 days proposed (3 Mt); 60–80 days recommended (5–6 Mt) |
| Natural Gas / LNG | ~10 days (1.9 BCM terminal buffer only) | ~44 days (35 Underground Gas Storage (UGS) facilities + LNG tanks) | ~36 days; 2–3 Mt / 2.7–4 BCM recommended |
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2026 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).