Bharat Petroleum trucks at the company's oil refinery in Mumbai, India. The US has said Indian companies can buy Russian crude oil and petroleum products loaded on to vessels before March 5. Bloomberg
Bharat Petroleum trucks at the company's oil refinery in Mumbai, India. The US has said Indian companies can buy Russian crude oil and petroleum products loaded on to vessels before March 5. Bloomberg
Bharat Petroleum trucks at the company's oil refinery in Mumbai, India. The US has said Indian companies can buy Russian crude oil and petroleum products loaded on to vessels before March 5. Bloomberg
Bharat Petroleum trucks at the company's oil refinery in Mumbai, India. The US has said Indian companies can buy Russian crude oil and petroleum products loaded on to vessels before March 5. Bloomberg

Oil prices drop as US offers India temporary waiver to buy from Russia amid Iran war


Aarti Nagraj
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Oil prices fell on Friday after the US said it would issue a 30-day waiver to allow Indian refiners to purchase Russian oil, as the Iran war causes supply concerns to grow.

Brent, the benchmark for two thirds of the world's seaborne oil, was down 1.17 per cent at 7.20am UAE time to $84.41 a barrel. West Texas Intermediate, the gauge tracking US crude, was 1.52 per cent higher at $79.78 a barrel.

The US Treasury issued a licence late on Thursday that allows Indian companies to buy Russian crude oil and petroleum products loaded on to vessels before March 5. It is valid for one month.

“To enable oil to keep flowing into the global market, the Treasury Department is issuing a temporary 30-day waiver to allow Indian refiners to purchase Russian oil,” US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a post on X. “This deliberately short-term measure will not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government as it only authorises transactions involving oil already stranded at sea.”

The stop-gap measure will "alleviate pressure caused by Iran’s attempt to take global energy hostage", he said. "We fully anticipate that New Delhi will ramp up purchases of US oil," he added.

Separately, US officials said they could announce measures to address rising energy prices, ​potentially ​including action in the ​oil futures market.

Oil prices have been rising since Monday over fears of supply constraints, after Israel and the US attacked Iran last Saturday. Tehran has responded by conducting strikes across the region.

The Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of global crude supplies pass, has not been officially closed, but there are no ships sailing through after Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned vessels to steer clear of the waterway.

The number of crude tankers passing through the strait has plunged by 88 per cent, while the number of vessels carrying liquefied petroleum gas is down 94 per cent, data from analytics company Kpler shows.

Meanwhile, Iranian drones and missiles have hit several Gulf energy sites, including fuel storage tanks in the UAE's Port of Fujairah and fuel tanks at the Omani port of Duqm.

Saudi Arabia's large domestic refinery, Ras Tanura, was struck on Monday, leading to a shutdown. Iran denied attacking the Saudi site on Tuesday. Attacks also led to the shutdown of the world's largest liquefied natural gas plant in Qatar, which meets 20 per cent of the global supply. Operator QatarEnergy said on Tuesday that it was shutting down all petrochemical production.

Updated: March 06, 2026, 4:52 AM