US oil export to India will increase jobs: Perry

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

Export of American to will create jobs, economic stability and national security in both countries, US Energy Secretary Rick Perry has said, days after the first ever shipment of US landed in

The shipment, loaded at Saint James, Louisiana and Freeport, Texas terminals last month, docked at Paradip port in on October 2.


"This event represents the growing and important strategic energy partnership between the US and India, and I look forward to exploring new opportunities to expand the role of reliable, responsible, and efficient energy sources with our allies," Perry said yesterday.

He said the export of US to will create jobs, economic stability and national security in both countries.

Following Prime Minister Modi's visit to the US, Indian companies ramped up purchases of American crude.

To encourage US crude purchases, the has allowed refiners to use a foreign rather than an Indian-owned vessel for the purchase. Indian refiners typically have to use domestic vessels for their crude imports.

In a blog post yesterday, the US State Department said increased Indian purchases of US are a direct outcome of the June visit of Modi to the White House during which the leaders committed to expanding and elevating bilateral energy cooperation through a Strategic Energy Partnership.

"We expect this first shipment of will be followed by many more as both the Indian Corporation and Bharat Petroleum have placed orders for over 2 million barrels from the United States," said Tom Vajda, Office Director for the Desk in the South and Central Asia Bureau of the State Department.

US shipments to have the potential to boost bilateral trade by up to USD 2 billion.

"Not only does this week's shipment demonstrate the strength of the US-bilateral relationship, but also how our relationship with continues to benefit the American economy," Vajda said.

Buying US crude has become attractive for Indian refiners after the differential between Brent (the benchmark crude or marker crude that serves as a reference price for buyers in western world) and Dubai (which serves as a benchmark for countries in the east) has narrowed.

India, the world's third-largest importer, joins Asian countries like South Korea, Japan and China to buy US crude after production cuts by cartel OPEC drove up prices of Middle East heavy-sour crude, or grades with a high sulphur content.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, October 06 2017. 08:48 IST