India sees 'perfect complimentarity' with Venezuela in energy trade amid Gulf crisis

Reuters
By Reuters June 05, 2026 02:36 (EAT)
Add as a Preferred Source on Google
India sees 'perfect complimentarity' with Venezuela in energy trade amid Gulf crisis

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi attends the extended format meeting of the BRICS summit in Kazan on October 23, 2024. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / POOL / AFP)

Vocalize Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Vocalize

 India and ​Venezuela sought to boost their ties in the energy sector on Thursday with New Delhi ‌saying that Caracas sees it as a preferred partner in the sector at a time global oil supplies have been disrupted by the Middle East crisis.

Venezuela's interim President Delcy Rodriguez is visiting India with a large team of ministers and ​held talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday.

Discussions between the two sides focused on ​co-operation in both upstream and downstream energy projects, Rudrendra Tandon, Secretary (East), in the ⁠Indian foreign ministry, told a media briefing after the talks.

"We are working with a government that is ​friendly, that wants a partnership with India," Tandon said. "We want to reciprocate that. Venezuela has traditionally been ​a close friend. We have collaborated very closely at the international level, so we are just going back to normal."

Venezuela sees India as a "preferred partner" in the energy sector and Rodriguez would visit oil refining facilities in India during her ​visit that ends on June 7, Tandon said.

She is also expected to meet top Indian energy industry ​leaders in financial capital Mumbai, Reuters reported.

INDIA IS A KEY BUYER OF VENEZUELAN OIL

India was the second-largest importer of Venezuelan ‌oil ⁠in May with purchases of 427,000 barrels per day, second only to the U.S., Reuters reported. India's Reliance Industries has emerged as one of the three largest buyers of Venezuelan crude in recent months.

Venezuela is on course to become the fourth-largest supplier of oil to India in May, Kpler data showed.

Rodriguez's visit comes as ​India, the world's third-largest ​oil importer and consumer, ⁠grapples with supply disruptions caused by the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, which has virtually shut the Strait of Hormuz – a key conduit that carried more than ​40% of the South Asian nation's crude oil imports.

India had stopped buying Venezuelan ​oil last ⁠year, after U.S. President Donald Trump authorized a 25% discretionary tariff on countries buying crude from the South American nation. It resumed purchases when sanctions were eased in February following a flagship oil supply pact between Washington ⁠and ​Caracas.

Under the agreement, reached after the U.S. capture of President ​Nicolas Maduro in January, Washington controls proceeds from Venezuelan oil sales through bank accounts administered by the Treasury Department, with commercial terms ​also following its guidance.

Join the Discussion

Share your perspective with the Citizen Digital community.

Moderation applies

Sign In to Publish

No comments yet

This discussion is waiting for your voice. Be the first to share your thoughts!