May12 , 2026

    Russian oil cargoes head away from India amid payment issues

    Related

    Govt Starts Preparations for JNPA IPO: Report

    The Indian government has begun preliminary preparations for a...

    Blame Game Intensifies Over JNPA Congestion Crisis

    Operational congestion at Jawaharlal Nehru Port Authority (JNPA) has...

    Indian Sailors Airlifted From Virus-Affected Ship

    Indian crew members were airlifted from a cargo vessel...

    India-Linked Gas Carrier Safely Transits Hormuz Shipping Lane

    An India-linked LPG carrier has successfully crossed the Strait...

    Crown Worldwide Group Opens New Facility in Coimbatore

    Crown Worldwide Group has launched a new facility in...

    Share

    A number of vessels hauling crude from Russia that had been idling off India are now headed away from the country eastwards, amid concerns over oil payments to Moscow that spurred a slump in arrivals last month.

    Five ships all carrying Sokol oil from Russia’s Far East — the NS Commander, Sakhalin Island, Krymsk, Nellis, and Liteyny Prospect — are moving toward the Malacca Strait at 7 to 10 knots, according to vessel-tracking data. A sixth also holding Sokol — the NS Century — is still close to Sri Lanka.

    “China seems to have stepped in to save the idling Sokol cargoes,” said Viktor Katona, lead crude analyst at data intelligence provider Kpler.

    India’s oil imports from Russia — a vital outlet for Moscow amid the war in Ukraine — fell in December to their lowest since January 2023, with local refiners not receiving a single Sokol cargo due to payment issues, according to Kpler.

    The US and its allies have imposed sanctions on entities deemed to have breached the $60-a-barrel cap on Russian crude exports, which came into effect late in 2022. Last month, a senior Treasury official said enforcement would be ramped up.

    The NS Century — which hauls about 700,000 barrels — was sanctioned by the US Treasury last year. Four of the other vessels carry similar volumes, while the fifth, the Nellis, can hold twice as much. Most of the ships are owned by Russia’s state-backed shipping company, Sovcomflot PJSC.

    spot_img