Sometimes a corporate announcement tells you everything you need to know about geopolitics. Reliance Industries, controlled by India's richest man Mukesh Ambani, just announced it will stop importing Russian crude into its export-only Jamnagar refinery effective Thursday. From December 1st onward, all exports will come exclusively from non-Russian sources.
The timing isn't subtle. Trump's sanctions on Russian oil giants Rosneft and Lukoil officially take effect Friday, meaning Reliance is getting ahead of the curve by exactly one day. This looks less like coincidence and more like a calculated response to mounting U.S. pressure.
A Decade-Long Deal That Lasted One Year
Here's the wild part: Just a year ago, Reliance signed a 10-year agreement to buy 500,000 barrels per day of Russian crude. That's not a small commitment. Now they're walking away from it entirely, at least for their export operations.
The Jamnagar facility is one of the world's largest single-site refineries, with separate units handling domestic and export markets. Reliance says it will honor all pre-committed Russian cargoes shipped through October 22nd, with the final shipment expected to depart by November 12th. After that, Russian barrels will only be processed in the domestic tariff area, ensuring exports comply with EU restrictions on fuel made from Russian crude that take effect in January.
This matters because Reliance is India's largest importer of Russian oil, accounting for roughly 50% of Russian oil flows into the country. And Europe represents 28% of Reliance's export market, so compliance with EU rules isn't optional.
History Repeating Under Trump Pressure
Journalist Suhasini Haidar of The Hindu spotted the pattern immediately, posting on X: "7 years after zeroing out Iran and Venezuelan oil under US pressure, will the government soon announce India is zeroing out Russian oil too?"
Trump's administration has been aggressive on this front, slapping India with steep tariffs including a 25% penalty linked to Russian oil purchases. Trump has argued these purchases fund Vladimir Putin's war on Ukraine. India has consistently denied the charge, but Reliance's abrupt pivot suggests U.S. pressure has been effective all along.
The shift didn't happen overnight. Indian oil refiners have been gradually reducing Russian imports over recent months. Reliance cut purchases from sanctioned Russian suppliers by 13% in October, according to a Carnegie Endowment report, while dramatically increasing imports from Saudi Arabia by 87% and from Iraq by 31% in the same month.
Negotiations for a broader India-U.S. trade deal have been repeatedly strained by New Delhi's Russian oil buying. Those tensions now appear to be easing after months of uncertainty. The White House told the Washington Post it welcomed Reliance's move, though it did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The message is clear: economic pressure works, even on relationships that seemed firmly entrenched just months ago.