India and Russia Deepen Energy Ties, Explore Gas Supplies and Joint Ventures
Quick Look
- India and Russia are strengthening energy cooperation, focusing on gas supplies, joint hydrocarbon ventures, and LPG purchases.
- Russia remains a key crude oil supplier, with US sanctions waivers continuing.
- Civil nuclear cooperation, highlighted by the Kudankulam project, is also advancing.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
India and Russia, strategic partners, are expanding their energy cooperation. This includes discussions on gas supplies, joint ventures for hydrocarbon development, and continued crude oil imports from Russia, supported by US sanctions waivers. Civil nuclear cooperation is also a growing area.
New Delhi: India and key strategic partner Russia are in talks aimed at expanding energy sector cooperation through gas supplies and joint ventures, including the development of hydrocarbon fields in the South Asian nation.
While Russia remains a stable exporter of crude to the country, the two sides are exploring opportunities for supplies of gas to Indian cities, expansion of CNG filling stations and new oil, gas and petrochemical facilities, according to Roman Babushkin, Russia’s deputy chief of mission in India.
This acquires significance as the West Asian crisis has hit energy supply chains and Russia maintains its position as the top supplier of crude to India. That’s set to continue as the US has extended the sanctions waiver on Russian oil exports to India. ET has learnt that India and Russia have held high-level discussions in recent weeks on the purchase of LPG from Russia. Also, there are reports that India is looking to explore new hydrocarbon assets in the east of the country.
Babushkin also referred to India-Russia civil nuclear cooperation gaining momentum and noted the success of the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project, which features cutting-edge Russian technologies, including those that can be used in small modular reactors (SMRs). He also cited the recently adopted Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India Act as being an enabler of further cooperation.
Russia has also become a steady supplier of sunflower oil (51%), fertilisers (25%) and beans (10%) to India. Joint ventures are being set up in the agriculture sector, according to Babushkin.
The diplomat was speaking to a select group comprising industry experts, investors and scholars at a meeting on Thursday organised by the Indo-Russia Innopratika Technology Hub that works closely with Niti Aayog.
Rajya Sabha member and former foreign secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla, who also addressed the gathering, said energy remains the most visible pillar of recent growth, and it will continue to matter. Russia supplied 33.3% of India’s crude oil imports in 2025. The bilateral energy relationship is not confined to crude imports. Rosneft holds a 49.13% stake in Nayara Energy, which runs a refinery in Vadinar that has a 20 million tonne per year capacity. Indian companies are present upstream in Russia: ONGC Videsh has a 20% participating interest in Sakhalin-1 and a 26% stake in Vankorneft.
He also cited the recently adopted Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India (SHANTI) Act as being an enabler of further cooperation.
Russia has also become a steady supplier of sunflower oil (51%), fertilisers (25%) and beans (10%) to India. Joint ventures are being set up in the agriculture sector, according to Babushkin.
The diplomat was speaking to a select group comprising industry experts, investors and scholars at a meeting on Thursday organised by the Indo-Russia Innopratika Technology Hub that works closely with Niti Aayog.
Rajya Sabha member and former foreign secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla, who also addressed the gathering, said energy remains the most visible pillar of recent growth, and it will continue to matter. Russia supplied 33.3% of India’s crude oil imports in 2025.
The bilateral energy relationship is not confined to crude imports. Rosneft holds a 49.13% stake in Nayara Energy, which runs a refinery in Vadinar that has a 20 million tonne per year capacity.
Indian companies are present upstream in Russia: ONGC Videsh has a 20% participating interest in Sakhalin-1 and a 26% stake in Vankorneft.
This means that India-Russia energy ties are not transactional, they also include investment, equity, refining and infrastructure, the former foreign secretary pointed out.
Civil nuclear cooperation remains one of the most future-oriented areas of the partnership. Kudankulam is India’s only nuclear power project established with another country, said Shringla, also a Rajya Sabha MP.
He suggested possible AI cooperation between India and Russia. India has approved 10 semiconductor projects with envisaged investments of about $19.16 billion, Shringla said.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Further expansion of India-Russia energy ties, including gas supplies and joint ventures.
Very likely · Medium term
Continued significant crude oil imports from Russia to India.
Very likely · Medium term
Increased cooperation in civil nuclear energy, potentially involving small modular reactors.
Likely · Long term
Open Questions
- Specific details on the proposed gas supply routes and infrastructure for Indian cities.
- The exact timeline and scale of new oil, gas, and petrochemical facilities.
- The specific nature of joint ventures for hydrocarbon development in India.
- The extent of India's potential investment in Russian upstream assets.