Saturday, April 11, 2026

The Exploration Imperative: Securing India’s Energy Future

 

The Exploration Imperative: Securing India’s Energy Future

R Kannan

India stands at a precarious crossroads in its quest for energy self-reliance. As of April 2026, the structural fragility of our energy security has never been more apparent. While the nation marches toward a green transition, the immediate reality remains anchored in hydrocarbons. Currently, India imports over 85% of its crude oil requirements—a figure that has steadily climbed as domestic production falters.

Data from the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (MoPNG) for the fiscal year 2025-26 reveals a sobering trend: crude oil production declined by 5.8% in January 2026 compared to the previous year. This isn't a one-off dip; the cumulative index for the April-January period shows a consistent 2.1% contraction. With the "Indian Basket" of crude witnessing a sharp rise and geopolitical volatility acting as a permanent multiplier, the economic drain is immense. Every $1 rise in global oil prices adds approximately $2 billion to our annual import bill, straining the current account deficit and fuelling domestic inflation.

 

Hurdles facing India's upstream sector

Aging Mature Fields and the Recovery Frontier

The backbone of India's domestic production—major assets like Mumbai High (offshore) and Cambay (onshore)—has been operational for over four decades. These fields have entered a "senescence" phase where reservoir pressure has naturally depleted, and the water-to-oil ratio has increased significantly. To arrest this decline, operators must move beyond primary and secondary recovery (like water flooding) to Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR).

This involves injecting thermal energy, specialized chemicals (polymers/surfactants), or miscible gases like $CO_2$ to alter the oil's viscosity or surface tension. These methods are not only capital-intensive but require high-precision reservoir modelling to ensure the injected fluids actually push the oil toward production wells rather than escaping through geological fractures.

Technological Barriers in Deep and Ultra-Deepwater

India’s future reserves are increasingly found in the Krishna-Godavari (KG) and Cauvery basins at depths exceeding 1,500 to 3,000 meters. Operating in these "ultra-deepwater" environments presents extreme engineering challenges: hydrostatic pressures are immense, and seabed temperatures are near freezing, which can cause paraffin or hydrate blockages in pipelines. Domestic firms often lack the specialized fleet of Sixth-Generation Dynamic Positioning (DP3) drillships and complex subsea production systems (trees, manifolds, and umbilicals) required for these environments. Consequently, India remains dependent on expensive foreign oilfield service (OFS) providers, which inflates the "lifting cost" per barrel and makes projects vulnerable to global equipment shortages.

High Exploration Risk and the "Data Gap"

Exploration is essentially a multi-billion dollar gamble on the subsurface. In India’s Category-II (proven but no production) and Category-III (frontier) basins, the "geological probability of success" (GPoS) is often low due to complex tectonics. A single "dry hole" in a deepwater block can result in a loss of $50 million to $100 million. For private investors, this risk is compounded by the lack of historical "well-logs" and high-resolution seismic data. Without a robust library of past failures and successes, the "entry barrier" remains high, leaving the government-owned ONGC and Oil India to coulder the majority of the risk, which limits the pace of nationwide discovery.

Lengthy Gestation Periods and Capital Lock-up

In the global oil industry, "time is money." In India, the cycle from winning an Open Acreage Licensing Policy (OALP) bid to the first commercial flow of oil is notoriously slow. This "Gestation Period" is bloated by a linear rather than parallel approval process. For example, getting permissions for 2D/3D seismic surveys, followed by environmental clearances for exploratory wells, and finally the "Declaration of Commerciality" (DoC), can take 7–10 years. During this decade, the investor’s capital is locked up without any revenue, yielding a poor Internal Rate of Return (IRR). Global investors prefer "short-cycle" assets (like US Shale), making India's long-lead projects less attractive.

Rigid Regulatory Environment and "Contract Sanctity"

Historically, the Indian upstream sector was governed by Production Sharing Contracts (PSC), which led to intense scrutiny of "cost recovery"—leading to government auditors questioned every dollar spent by the operator. While the newer Revenue Sharing Contract (RSC) model under HELP has simplified this, legacy disputes still clog the judicial system. Furthermore, overlapping jurisdictions between the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH), the Ministry of Petroleum, and state-level environmental boards create a "compliance maze." Operators often face conflicting directives regarding technical standards or safety protocols, leading to operational paralysis.

Complex Land Acquisition and Social License

For onshore blocks (predominantly in Assam, Gujarat, and Rajasthan), land is a zero-sum game. Exploration requires temporary access to large tracts of land, while production requires permanent acquisition for "well-pads" and "Group Gathering Stations" (GGS). In densely populated or forest-heavy regions, acquiring this land involves navigating fragmented ownership records and intense local resistance. Even after legal acquisition, "Social License to Operate" is a challenge; local communities often demand employment or infrastructure that the project may not be scaled to provide. Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA) can take years, especially if the block overlaps with "Eco-Sensitive Zones" or tiger corridors.

Limited Global Major Participation

The absence of "Big Oil" (ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP, Shell, TotalEnergies) as lead operators in Indian blocks is a significant hurdle. These companies bring not just capital, but proprietary technology and global supply chain leverage. Their limited appetite for Indian acreage is often attributed to the perception of "fiscal instability" and the lack of "giant" discoveries in recent years. Without these majors, India misses out on the "cluster effect"—where one major discovery leads to an ecosystem of service providers and secondary explorers that accelerate the development of an entire basin.

Inadequate Pre-Bid Seismic Data

The quality of a bidding round is only as good as the data provided. Large portions of India’s 2.3 million square kilometers of sedimentary area have only been surveyed with sparse, low-resolution 2D seismic lines. For a company to commit to a multi-year drilling program, they require "3D Wide-Azimuth" seismic data that provides a clear picture of the rock strata. Currently, the onus of high-end data acquisition often falls on the bidder after they win the block. If the government were to provide "Multi-Client" high-resolution data upfront, it would significantly lower the entry risk and attract more aggressive bidding.

Fiscal Volatility and Windfall Taxes

Oil is a global commodity with extreme price cycles. India’s fiscal regime has occasionally been "reactive" to these cycles. For instance, the imposition of Special Additional Excise Duty (SAED) or "windfall taxes" during price spikes, while beneficial for the national exchequer, creates a "sovereign risk" perception. Long-term E&P projects require fiscal stability for 20–25 years. Frequent changes in royalty rates, cess, or the introduction of new levies mid-contract make it difficult for financial institutions to model the project's viability, often leading to higher borrowing costs for Indian producers.

Infrastructure Bottlenecks and Evacuation Logics

Finding oil is only half the battle; transporting it to a refinery is the other. Many of India's new discoveries are in remote or "frontier" locations where the pipeline grid is non-existent. Building a 100-kilometer heated pipeline (required for "waxy" Indian crude) can cost hundreds of crores and requires Right of Way (RoW) clearances from thousands of landowners. In the absence of pipelines, operators are forced to use "trucking," which is not only expensive and carbon-intensive but also logistically impossible for high-volume production. This lack of "evacuation infrastructure" often turns a technically successful discovery into a "stranded asset."

Technical Manpower Shortage and the Digital Shift

The Indian oil and gas sector is facing a "Great Crew Change" where seasoned geoscientists and petroleum engineers are retiring, leaving a void that the current academic curriculum is struggling to fill. As exploration moves toward unconventional reservoirs (Shale, CBM) and HPHT (High Pressure High Temperature) wells, the industry requires specialized talent familiar with geomechanical modelling and advanced fracking physics. Furthermore, the rise of the "Digital Oilfield" demands a hybrid workforce—professionals who possess both traditional domain expertise and high-level data science skills to manage AI-driven seismic interpretation and real-time drilling analytics. Without this specialized human capital, India remains reliant on high-cost international consultants, slowing down the localization of technical innovation.

Environmental Scrutiny and Climate Litigation

India’s commitment to achieving Net-Zero by 2070 has intensified the conflict between energy security and environmental preservation. Upstream projects now face a gauntlet of judicial scrutiny, with the National Green Tribunal (NGT) and various High Courts frequently staying projects in "eco-sensitive" zones or "No-Go" offshore areas. Beyond local litigation, global financial institutions are increasingly adopting ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) mandates, which restrict funding for new "greenfield" fossil fuel projects. This "Green Finance" squeeze makes it difficult for Indian explorers to secure low-interest loans, forcing them to rely on domestic capital which is often more expensive and limited in scale.

Sub-optimal Recovery Factors and EOR Investment

Enhanced Oil Recovery methods, AI generated

 

The "recovery factor" (the percentage of oil that can be extracted from a reservoir) in India averages significantly lower than the global benchmark of 35–40%. Many Indian fields are trapped at a 25–28% recovery rate because they lack the massive capital investment required for Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR). EOR is technically daunting; it involves injecting polymers to thicken water (Chemical EOR) or injecting $CO_2$ (Gas EOR) to reduce oil viscosity. These processes require a steady supply of injection fluids—such as $CO_2$ captured from industrial clusters—and sophisticated subsurface monitoring to ensure the injection doesn't bypass the oil. Without a nationwide policy to subsidize these high-cost interventions, billions of barrels of "proven" oil remain stuck underground.

Pricing and Marketing Restrictions

A major deterrent for deepwater exploration has been the historical lack of "Pricing Freedom." While the government has introduced the Hydrocarbon Exploration and Licensing Policy (HELP) to allow market-determined pricing, legacy fields and "nomination" blocks still operate under restrictive price caps set by the government. When the "ceiling price" for gas is lower than the actual "cost of production" in challenging terrains like the KG-Basin, companies are forced to "shut-in" wells rather than produce at a loss. This lack of a uniform, market-linked pricing mechanism across all blocks creates a tiered investment climate where older, productive assets are disincentivized from maximizing their output.

Supply Chain Disruptions and Geopolitical Volatility

India's upstream sector is highly sensitive to the global logistics of specialized equipment. Geopolitical flashpoints, such as the Red Sea crisis or the Russia-Ukraine conflict, have led to skyrocketing insurance premiums for maritime transport and significant delays in the arrival of Jack-up rigs and specialized "casing" pipes. Since India lacks a robust domestic manufacturing ecosystem for high-end oilfield equipment, a delay in a single critical component can stall a multi-million dollar drilling campaign. These disruptions not only increase the "Daily Spread Rate" (the cost of keeping a rig on-site) but also throw off the tight seasonal windows required for offshore operations during the monsoon.

Unconventional Resource Barriers (Shale & CBM)

hydraulic fracturing process for shale gas, AI generated

India possesses significant potential in Shale Oil (in the Cambay and Damodar basins) and Coal Bed Methane (CBM), yet production is negligible compared to the US or Australia. The barrier is twofold: technical and environmental. Extracting shale requires "horizontal drilling" and "multi-stage hydraulic fracturing," which consumes millions of gallons of water per well—a scarce resource in many Indian states. Furthermore, the regulatory framework for "Simultaneous Production" (extracting oil, gas, and coal from the same block) has been historically scarce. Without a dedicated "Unconventional Policy" that addresses water management and land-use conflicts, these vast reserves remain commercially stranded.

Data Redaction and Transparency Issues

For decades, India's geological data was treated as a "classified asset" due to national security concerns, particularly in border states and coastal regions. This led to a "redacted" data environment where international researchers and global majors could not access the raw "Pre-Stack Pro-Migration" (PSDM) data needed for sophisticated analysis. While the National Data Repository (NDR) has improved access, much of the legacy data is still stored in obsolete formats or lacks the resolution required for modern AI-based prospecting. This lack of transparency prevents the global scientific community from identifying "stratigraphic traps" that Indian PSUs might have overlooked.

High Cost of Capital and Payback Delays

The E&P business in India is characterized by "front-loaded" capital expenditure and "back-ended" returns. Indian companies face a Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) that is often 4–6% higher than their global counterparts in the US or Europe. This is due to higher sovereign risk ratings and domestic interest rates. When combined with the "lengthy gestation periods" (7–10 years to first oil), the Net Present Value (NPV) of Indian projects often turns negative. Without specialized "Energy Banks" or government-backed credit guarantees for exploration, only the largest PSUs can afford to bid, stifling the growth of a vibrant, multi-player ecosystem.

Inter-Departmental Friction and "Siloed" Approvals

Despite the "Ease of Doing Business" initiatives, a typical oil project requires clearances from the Ministry of Petroleum, Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), Ministry of Defence (for offshore), and State Revenue Departments. A "Single Window Clearance" portal exists, but it often acts merely as a digital post-office. The actual "chasing" of files across different departments remains a manual and sluggish process. For instance, a forest clearance might be granted by the Centre, but the actual "handover" of land by the State government can take another 24 months. This lack of horizontal integration between ministries is a primary cause of project "time overruns."

Security Risks and Geopolitical Friction in Frontier Basins

Exploration in India's "frontier" regions—such as the North-East (Assam-Arakan fold belt) or the disputed waters of the maritime boundary—is fraught with physical security risks. In the North-East, exploration activities have historically been disrupted by local insurgencies, blockades, and demands for "protection money," which drive up security costs and discourage private staff. In offshore regions, "No-Go" zones mandated by the Navy or the proximity to international maritime boundaries create "blind spots" where exploration is prohibited. Navigating these security constraints requires a level of coordination with the Home and Defence ministries that often falls outside the traditional expertise of oil companies.


Roadmap for India's upstream sector

A. Central Government & Ministry of Petroleum (MoPNG)

Full Implementation of the ORD Amendment Act 2025

The Oilfields (Regulation and Development) Amendment Act 2025 is a legislative milestone that fundamentally redefines the scope of exploration. By expanding the definition of "mineral oils" to encompass all hydrocarbons—including Shale, Coal Bed Methane (CBM), and Gas Hydrates—the government eliminates the need for separate licenses for different resources within the same block. This "Unified Licensing" approach removes the legal ambiguity that previously stalled projects when an explorer found gas in an oil block or shale in a coal-bearing area. It allows for a holistic "Ring-Fenced" development strategy, where an operator can optimize the entire subsurface potential under a single regulatory umbrella, significantly reducing compliance costs and legal friction.

Aggressive Expansion of "No-Go" Area Releases

Historically, nearly 1 million square kilometers of India’s offshore sedimentary area were off-limits due to their proximity to defence installations, missile testing ranges, or space corridors. Building on the 2022-23 initiative that cleared approximately 98% of these restrictions, the 2026 plan involves a "Dynamic Zoning" system. By utilizing advanced maritime surveillance and scheduling coordination between the Navy, ISRO, and MoPNG, "windows of opportunity" can be created for seismic vessels to operate in previously forbidden waters. Releasing these high-potential frontier areas—particularly in the Andaman and Kutch offshore—provides a massive pipeline of "virgin acreage" for the Open Acreage Licensing Policy (OALP) rounds, attracting global giants who seek large-scale, underexplored prospects.

Targeted Fiscal Incentives for EOR/IOR Projects

As production from "nomination" fields like Mumbai High reaches a critical decline point, the government must incentivize the high-cost Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) and Improved Oil Recovery (IOR) phase. The proposed fiscal framework includes a 50% reduction in royalty rates for the incremental oil produced through EOR/IOR for the first seven years. Additionally, the government could allow for "Accelerated Depreciation" on specialized EOR equipment, such as $CO_2$ capture units and polymer injection plants. By lowering the "Break-Even" price for these complex projects, the government ensures that billions of barrels of "Attic Oil" (bypassed oil) become commercially viable, effectively extending the life of India's most productive assets by decades.

National Data Repository (NDR) 2.0: Cloud-Based Modernization

The National Data Repository (NDR) is the "digital backbone" of India's upstream sector. The 2026 modernization plan involves transitioning the NDR to a high-speed, cloud-native platform that offers global oil majors "virtual data rooms." This allows international geoscientists to run complex simulations and AI-driven seismic reprocessing on Indian data without needing physical presence. By providing "Open Access" to high-resolution 2D/3D seismic data, well logs, and gravity-magnetic surveys, the government creates a transparent marketplace. This democratization of data is the single most effective tool to "de-risk" the Indian subsurface for foreign investors, who often cite "data opacity" as a reason for bypassing Indian bidding rounds.

Financing "Strategic Exploration Reserves" (SER)

To bridge the gap between "un-appraised" basins and "drill-ready" blocks, the government is establishing a Strategic Exploration Fund. This fund will finance government-led, high-density seismic surveys in Category-II and III basins (like the Mahanadi or Vindhyan basins). By identifying promising "Prospects" and "Leads" before the auction, the government removes the primary risk factor for private players. Once the data proves a high probability of hydrocarbons, the government can command significantly higher revenue shares or "Signature Bonuses" during the OALP rounds. This "State-Led De-risking" model ensures that even frontier regions get a fair shake at being explored by risk-averse private capital.

B. Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH)

Rationalizing Bid Criteria for Frontier Basins

The DGH is shifting the "Rules of the Game" for frontier basins where geological risk is extreme. Instead of the standard Revenue Sharing Model (RSM)—which can be punitive if production is low—the new criteria prioritize the "Minimum Work Program" (MWP). This means a bidder is selected based on how many exploratory wells they promise to drill and how much 3D seismic they will acquire, rather than how much future profit they promise to share. This shift encourages aggressive exploration spending in the ground rather than "accounting promises" to the state. It ensures that even if a commercial discovery isn't made, the nation gains invaluable geological knowledge through the physical work performed.

Establishment of Fast-Track Dispute Resolution Cells (FT-DRC)

Technical audits and cost-recovery disputes have historically plagued the Indian upstream sector, with some cases dragging on for over a decade. The DGH is now instituting Fast-Track Dispute Resolution Cells composed of independent technical experts and legal mediators. These cells are mandated to resolve operational disputes—such as the "Declaration of Commerciality" or technical feasibility of a field development plan—within a strict 180-day window. By providing a "non-litigious" pathway to settle disagreements, the DGH restores investor confidence in "Contract Sanctity" and ensures that corporate capital is spent on drilling rigs rather than legal fees.

Mandatory Deployment of Digital Twin Technology

To modernize field management, the DGH is mandating that all major offshore field development plans (FDPs) include a "Digital Twin"—a virtual, real-time replica of the physical reservoir and production infrastructure. These twins use IoT sensors and AI to monitor pressure fluctuations, flow rates, and equipment health. By predicting potential "Sand Ingress" or "Equipment Fatigue" before they happen, operators can optimize production cycles and minimize downtime. The DGH will use these digital models to perform "Remote Technical Audits," reducing the need for intrusive physical inspections and allowing for a more collaborative, data-driven approach to reservoir management.

Pre-Cleared Blocks: Standardizing Environmental Clearances

One of the biggest bottlenecks in the "First Oil" timeline is the 2-3 year wait for Environmental Clearances (EC). The DGH, in coordination with the MoEFCC, is moving toward a "Pre-Cleared Block" model. Under this system, the DGH conducts "Baseline Environmental Studies" for the entire block prior to the bidding round. When a company wins the block, they receive a "provisional EC" that allows them to start seismic surveys and "Exploratory Drilling" immediately. This proactive approach can shave up to 36 months off the project lifecycle, drastically improving the project's Net Present Value (NPV) and making Indian blocks highly competitive in the global market.

Integrated Infrastructure Planning & "Hub-and-Spoke" Models

The DGH is spearheading a master plan to map every existing pipeline, processing terminal, and refinery across India’s oil-producing regions. The goal is to identify "Marginal Fields" that are too small to justify their own infrastructure but are located within 20-50 km of an existing "Hub" (like ONGC's Hazira or Kakinada terminals). By mandating "Third-Party Access" to these facilities at fair tariffs, the DGH allows small explorers to "plug and play." This "Hub-and-Spoke" model turns technically successful discoveries into commercially viable ones by eliminating the need for massive capital expenditure on new evacuation routes, thereby fast-tracking the production of "Stranded Gas" and "Small Oil."

C. Public Sector Undertakings (ONGC, Oil India)

Global Technology Partnerships for Deepwater/HPHT

India’s National Oil Companies (NOCs) are increasingly venturing into "High-Pressure High-Temperature" (HPHT) and ultra-deepwater regimes in the Krishna-Godavari (KG) basin. To navigate these high-risk environments, ONGC and Oil India must move beyond service-contractor relationships and form Equity Joint Ventures with global technology leaders like ExxonMobil, TotalEnergies, or Equinor. These partnerships allow for the transfer of proprietary subsea engineering "know-how" and the deployment of advanced dynamic-positioning drillships. By sharing both the risk and the technical learning curve, Indian PSUs can transform complex deepwater discoveries into operational realities far faster than by working in isolation.

Aggressive Infill Drilling to Arrest Decline

To counter the natural 2–5% annual production decline in mature "nomination" fields, PSUs must launch massive Infill Drilling campaigns. This involves drilling new wells into existing reservoirs to tap into "bypassed" oil pockets that were missed during initial development. By utilizing Geosteering and Horizontal Drilling techniques, operators can maximize the contact area with the reservoir rock. This strategy provides the quickest "return on investment" because the surface infrastructure (pipelines and processing plants) is already in place, allowing the newly tapped oil to be monetized almost immediately.

Indigenization of Drilling Equipment (Make in India)

The reliance on imported rigs, blowout preventers (BOPs), and subsea trees exposes Indian PSUs to global supply chain shocks and currency fluctuations. Under the "Atmanirbhar Bharat" initiative, PSUs must partner with domestic engineering giants (like L&T or BHEL) to establish local manufacturing hubs for oilfield equipment. By providing long-term "off-take" guarantees to these manufacturers, the government can foster a domestic Oilfield Services (OFS) ecosystem. This indigenization not only reduces "Lifting Costs" by 20–30% but also ensures that critical spare parts are available locally, preventing costly downtime during drilling operations.

Satellite Field Development via Subsea Tie-backs

Many of India’s offshore discoveries are "Marginal Fields"—pools of oil too small to justify a multi-billion dollar standalone platform. The solution lies in Subsea Tie-back technology, where "Satellite" wells are connected via subsea pipelines (umbilicals) to an existing "Mother Platform" several kilometers away. This "Cluster Development" approach allows PSUs to monetize multiple small discoveries using a single processing hub. By treating a basin as a networked grid rather than a series of isolated projects, PSUs can turn hundreds of millions of barrels of "stranded" oil into a commercially viable resource.

Upskilling for the Digital Oilfield and Unconventionals

The transition to a high-tech upstream sector requires a fundamental shift in human capital. PSUs must establish Centres of Excellence (CoE) focused on 4D reservoir modelling, AI-driven seismic interpretation, and the physics of hydraulic fracturing for Shale and CBM. These centres could serve as "boot camps" where traditional petroleum engineers are upskilled in data analytics and automation. By fostering a workforce that is comfortable with "Digital Twins" and remote-operated subsea vehicles, Indian PSUs ensure they remain competitive against global majors and can manage increasingly complex assets with higher efficiency.

D. Private Sector & International Investors

Adoption of AI and Machine Learning in Exploration

The private sector’s greatest contribution to India’s oil output will be "Computational Exploration." By applying Machine Learning (ML) algorithms to decades of legacy seismic data held in the National Data Repository, private firms can identify "Hidden Stratigraphic Traps" that were invisible to traditional human analysis. AI can process "Big Data" from gravity-magnetic surveys and well logs at speeds and accuracies previously impossible. This technology-led approach significantly increases the "Probability of Success" (PoS) for exploratory wells, reducing the number of "dry holes" and attracting more risk-capital into Indian basins.

Agility in Discovered Small Fields (DSF)

The government’s Discovered Small Field (DSF) policy is designed for agile private players who can operate with lower overheads than massive PSUs. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) could focus on "Lean Operational Models," utilizing modular, skid-mounted processing units that can be moved from one well to another. These private players can bring "orphaned" discoveries—fields that were found by PSUs but deemed too small to develop—into production within 24–36 months. Their agility in decision-making and cost-control is essential for squeezing value out of India's fragmented hydrocarbon reserves.

Shared Services and Logistics Models

In a high-cost environment like the offshore East Coast, private operators could adopt "Co-opetition" by sharing high-cost logistics. This includes the joint leasing of offshore supply vessels (OSVs), helicopters for crew changes, and even shared emergency response teams. By creating a Basin-Wide Logistics Hub, operators can reduce their fixed "General and Administrative" (G&A) expenses. This collaborative model improves the "Net Present Value" (NPV) of individual projects, making even marginal discoveries attractive to international investors who might otherwise be deterred by the high cost of standalone operations.

Community Engagement for "Social License to Operate"

Onshore exploration often faces "Not In My Backyard" (NIMBY) resistance. Private investors must move beyond mandatory CSR and adopt a "Shared Value" approach. This involves proactive community engagement: training local youth for technical jobs, building climate-resilient local infrastructure, and ensuring transparent compensation for land use. By securing a "Social License to Operate" through trust and partnership, private firms can avoid the costly work-stoppages, blockades, and legal hurdles that have historically plagued projects in states like Assam and Tamil Nadu.

Carbon Capture & Storage (CCS) for Green Finance

To attract global "Green Finance" in an era of decarbonization, private projects must integrate Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS). By capturing CO_2 from nearby industrial clusters and injecting it into depleting oil fields for Enhanced Oil Recovery (CO2-EOR), companies can produce "Low-Carbon Crude." This creates a circular economy where the carbon footprint of production is partially offset by underground storage. Aligning oil production with India's "Energy Transition" goals makes these projects eligible for ESG-linked loans and international climate funds, lowering the overall cost of capital.

E. State Governments & Other Stakeholders

Single-Window State Clearances and Digital Land Records

While the MoPNG manages licenses, the actual "groundbreaking" depends on State Governments. States must synchronize their Revenue, Forest, and Pollution Control boards with the central "Gati Shakti" portal. By digitizing land records and providing "Deemed Approvals" for exploration activities (which have a low environmental footprint), states can reduce the "Permit-to-Drill" time from years to months. Faster clearances mean faster royalty flows to the state exchequer, creating a "win-win" for both the operator and the regional economy.

Academic-Industry R&D for Basin-Specific Solutions

Indian universities (like the IITs and RGIPT) must partner with E&P firms to conduct "Applied Research" on specific Indian geological challenges—such as the high-wax content of Rajasthan crude or the volcanic "Trap" rocks of the Deccan. By funding Basin-Specific Research Hubs, the industry can develop customized chemical surfactants for EOR or specialized drill bits for hard-rock formations. Localized R&D reduces the dependence on expensive "one-size-fits-all" international technologies and fosters a home-grown innovation ecosystem.

Financial Institutions' "Energy Security" Credit Lines

Domestic banks and NBFCs must recognize oil and gas exploration as a "Strategic Infrastructure" sector. Financial institutions could create specialized "Exploration Credit Lines" with longer moratorium periods and interest rates pegged to project milestones. By providing "Bridge Financing" during the high-risk exploration phase, banks can help diversify the player base, allowing smaller Indian companies to compete with global majors. This financial deepening is crucial for a sector that has traditionally been capital-constrained.

Promoting Coal Bed Methane (CBM) in the "Mineral Belt"

States like Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, and West Bengal sit on vast coal reserves that also contain Coal Bed Methane (CBM). State governments could offer "Co-development" incentives where land acquired for coal mining is also used for CBM extraction. This "Dual-Resource" strategy maximizes the energy yield per acre and provides a cleaner gaseous fuel for local industries. By simplifying the "Right of Way" for gas gathering pipelines in coal-rich zones, states can turn CBM into a significant contributor to India’s 15% gas-mix target.

Public Awareness Campaigns on Energy Sovereignty

The MoPNG and State Governments must collaborate on a National Energy Literacy Mission. The goal is to educate the public on how domestic oil production reduces "Imported Inflation," strengthens the Rupee, and funds social welfare programs through royalties. When citizens understand that "Domestic Oil is National Security," there is greater public support for large-scale infrastructure like cross-country pipelines and seismic surveys. Building this public consensus is the ultimate "de-risking" tool for the long-term growth of India’s hydrocarbon industry.

Cost Effective Technologies

Subsea Tie-back Technology (Integrated Subsea Solutions)

The Process: Instead of building a new, multi-billion dollar offshore platform for every discovery, "Tie-back" technology connects subsea wellheads of a new discovery directly to an existing "host" facility via a network of pipelines (umbilicals). The existing platform processes the fluids, eliminating the need for independent surface infrastructure. This is particularly effective for Marginal Fields or small discoveries located within 20–50 km of a major hub like Mumbai High or the KG-Basin.

Action Plans :

  • DGH Role: Mandate "Third-Party Access" to existing PSU infrastructure at standardized tariffs to allow private players to "plug and play."
  • MoPNG Role: Provide "Infrastructure Credit" to companies that build shared pipelines, reducing the initial capital burden for small explorers.
  • Stakeholder Action: ONGC and Oil India to map all "Hub" capacities and create a digital catalogue of available tie-in points for OALP bidders.

AI-Driven Seismic Reprocessing & Machine Learning

The Process:

This technology uses AI algorithms to "clean" and re-analyse decades of legacy 2D and 3D seismic data stored in the National Data Repository (NDR). Machine Learning can identify "stratigraphic traps" (subtle oil-bearing layers) that traditional human interpretation might have missed. By "drilling on the computer" first, the success rate of exploratory wells increases from the current 20-30% to over 50%, saving millions in "dry hole" costs.

Action Plans :

  • National Data Repository (NDR): Move NDR to a cloud-based "Virtual Data Room" (VDR) allowing global AI firms to run algorithms on Indian data remotely.
  • Academic Collaboration: Establish "AI in Energy" labs at IITs and RGIPT to develop indigenous algorithms tailored to India’s unique Deccan Trap and Himalayan geology.
  • Startup Incentives: Launch a "Digital Upstream Challenge" to onboard Indian tech startups for solving reservoir modelling problems.

Modular & Mobile Gas Processing Units (MGPUs)

The Process:

Traditional gas processing plants take years to build. Modular units are "skid-mounted" and pre-fabricated in factories. They can be trucked to a remote wellsite, plugged in, and start processing gas within weeks. If a well runs dry, these units are simply disconnected and moved to a new site. This "Pay-as-you-grow" model reduces initial CAPEX by nearly 40% and is ideal for the scattered discoveries in the North-East and Rajasthan.

Action Plans :

  • Make in India: Incentivize domestic engineering firms (like BHEL/L&T) to manufacture standardized modular units to avoid import delays.
  • Simplified Licensing: Create a "Mobile Asset License" that allows an operator to move equipment between blocks without needing a fresh EIA (Environmental Impact Assessment) for every relocation.
  • Private Participation: Encourage "Equipment Leasing" models where private firms provide MGPUs on a per-barrel rental basis.

Cyclic Steam Stimulation (CSS) for Heavy Oil

The Process:

Also known as the "Huff-and-Puff" method, this is a thermal EOR (Enhanced Oil Recovery) technique. High-pressure steam is injected into a well to heat the thick, heavy crude (common in Rajasthan fields). The well is "soaked" for a few days to let the heat thin the oil, and then the same well is used to pump the now-mobile oil out. It is significantly cheaper than continuous steam flooding and can increase production by 40–60% in mature wells.

Action Plans :

  • Pilot Expansion: Oil India Limited (OIL) to scale up their successful Rajasthan CSS pilots to other heavy-oil blocks in the Cambay Basin.
  • Fiscal Support: MoPNG to offer a "Cess Waiver" for oil produced specifically through CSS/Thermal EOR to offset the high fuel costs of steam generation.
  • Tech Transfer: Form "Technical Service Agreements" with international firms specialized in heavy oil (like those from Canada or Oman) to optimize steam-to-oil ratios.

Micro-Seismic Passive Monitoring

The Process:

Unlike traditional seismic surveys that use expensive "shaker trucks" or explosives to create sound waves, passive monitoring uses highly sensitive sensors to listen to the "natural earth noises" and tiny tremors created by fluid movement in the reservoir. It provides a real-time, 24/7 map of how oil and gas are flowing underground. This helps operators place wells precisely where the oil is most concentrated, preventing "water-cut" and maximizing the Recovery Factor.

Action Plans :

  • DGH Mandate: Require all "Deepwater Field Development Plans" to include passive monitoring arrays for better reservoir management.
  • Skill Building: Train PSU geophysicists in "Passive Seismic Tomography" through international workshops and certifications.
  • Data Sharing: Create a national database for passive seismic signatures to help identify regional stress patterns across Indian basins.

The adoption of these  technologies—Subsea Tie-backs, AI/ML, Modular Units, CSS, and Passive Monitoring—represents a shift toward a smarter, leaner Indian oil sector. By leveraging existing infrastructure and data, India can bypass the "high-cost, high-risk" traps of traditional exploration. The success of this transition depends on a "Policy-Tech-Capital" triad: where the Government de-risks the policy, PSUs adopt the technology, and Private Capital provides the momentum. If implemented aggressively, these technologies can significantly arrest the decline of aging fields and bring "First Oil" from new discoveries to the Indian grid in record time.

Conclusion

India’s journey toward energy independence is not a sprint but a high-stakes marathon that requires every stakeholder—from the central policymaker to the local community leader—to run in unison. The transition from 88% import dependency to a self-reliant hydrocarbon ecosystem depends on the aggressive implementation of the strategies detailed above. By merging the legislative power of the ORD Amendment 2025, the technological prowess of Global Majors, and the operational agility of the Private Sector, India can finally unlock the "Black Gold" hidden within its 26 sedimentary basins. In an increasingly volatile geopolitical world, every barrel of oil produced domestically is a brick in the wall of India’s economic sovereignty and future prosperity.

 

 

Friday, April 10, 2026

The High Cost of Conflict: Why the Global Economy Cannot Afford a Forever War

 

The High Cost of Conflict: Why the Global Economy Cannot Afford a Forever War

R Kannan

In the hallowed halls of central banks and the glass towers of international financial institutions, the language is typically one of "headwinds," "volatility," and "fiscal space." But as the conflict in the West continues to grind on, the vocabulary is shifting toward something far more ominous. We are no longer discussing a temporary market tremor; we are witnessing the systematic dismantling of the post-Cold War economic order. From the Federal Reserve’s inflation dogmas to the World Bank’s poverty reduction targets, the data is screaming a singular truth: the "lose-lose" logic of kinetic warfare is cannibalizing the global economy.

The most immediate casualty of prolonged conflict is, predictably, the economic health of the combatants and their immediate neighbours. According to recent IMF projections, economies directly involved in the theatre of war are facing "big economic distress"—a polite euphemism for double-digit contractions, shattered infrastructure, and the total evaporation of private investment. However, in a hyper-globalized era, the contagion cannot be contained by borders. The "spillover effects" cited by the World Bank are now tidal waves, threatening to pull the global growth rate below the critical 2 percent threshold that historically signals a global recession.

The Great Inflationary Spike

Perhaps the most visible scar of the war is the resurgence of the "inflation monster," a ghost the Federal Reserve thought it had exorcised decades ago. The war has acted as a catalyst for a dual-pronged assault on price stability. On one side, we see a sharp increase in oil and natural gas prices. Energy is the master resource; when its price spikes, the cost of everything—from the plastic in a medical syringe to the fuel in a delivery truck—follows suit.

This is not merely "consumer inflation" hitting the pockets of households in London or New York. It is "producer inflation" at the factory gate. As energy and raw material costs soar, manufacturers are forced to either absorb the loss—threatening corporate performance and solvency—or pass it on to a consumer base already reeling from a cost-of-living crisis. The Financial Times has noted that this "input shock" is particularly devastating for the Eurozone’s industrial heartland, where the era of cheap energy has come to a violent end.

The Fractured Supply Chain

For thirty years, the global economy operated on the principle of "just-in-time" efficiency. The war has replaced this with a "just-in-case" survivalism. Supply chain disruptions are no longer occasional glitches; they are structural features of the new landscape. The closure of trade routes, the imposition of sweeping sanctions, and the destruction of logistics hubs have rerouted the arteries of global commerce.

Data from the World Trade Organization (WTO) suggests a significant reduction in global trade volumes. We are seeing a "friend-shoring" or "near-shoring" trend that, while perhaps strategically sound, is economically inefficient. When trade is restricted by geopolitics rather than guided by comparative advantage, everyone pays a "security premium." This fragmentation ensures that goods are produced not where it is cheapest, but where it is safest, permanently raising the floor for global prices.

The Debt Trap and Fiscal Fragility

As the war drags on, the fiscal health of nations is deteriorating at an alarming rate. Governments are caught in a pincer movement. On one hand, there is a perceived need for increased government expenditure—not just on direct military aid or defence procurement, but on domestic subsidies to shield citizens from the aforementioned energy spikes.

The result is a sharp increase in national debt across both developed and emerging markets. The Economist has highlighted that this surge in borrowing is occurring simultaneously with a period of high interest rates, as central banks like the Fed struggle to contain war-induced inflation. This creates a "sovereign debt trap": higher deficits lead to higher borrowing costs, which in turn increase the fiscal deficit, leaving little room for investment in green transitions or education. We are effectively mortgaging the future to pay for the destruction of the present.

Market Turbulence and Corporate Anxiety

For the investor, the war has turned the "efficient market" into a hall of mirrors. Volatile stock, currency, and commodity markets have become the norm. The US Dollar, often used as a safe-haven asset, has seen fluctuations that destabilize emerging market currencies, making their dollar-denominated debt even harder to service.

Corporate performance is being squeezed from both ends. High interest rates make capital expensive, while market volatility makes long-term planning impossible. When a CEO cannot predict the price of energy or the stability of a supply line six months out, they stop investing. They hoard cash. They downsize. This "wait-and-see" approach is a silent killer of economic dynamism.

From Lose-Lose to Win-Win: The Imperative for Peace

The current trajectory is a textbook example of a "lose-lose" game. The warring parties are depleting their human and financial capital; the developed world is battling stagflation; and the developing world is facing food and energy insecurity that threatens to undo decades of progress.

The data from the IMF and World Bank is clear: there is no "military-industrial" silver lining that can offset the macro-economic devastation of a prolonged conflict. The multiplier effect of war expenditure is far lower than that of investment in infrastructure, technology, or health.

What is required now is a pivot toward a "win-win" framework. This is not mere idealism; it is hard-nosed economic realism. A cessation of hostilities would provide an immediate "peace dividend" to the global economy. It would stabilize energy markets, reopen trade routes, and allow central banks to pivot away from aggressive tightening, easing the pressure on national debts.

The New York Times and other editorial boards have frequently debated the "cost of victory," but we must also calculate the "cost of persistence." Serious efforts to stop the war must be viewed as the ultimate economic stimulus package. Diplomatic capital is currently the only currency that can prevent a lost decade for the global economy.

In conclusion, the global economic engine is running on fumes and friction. The data is unequivocal: the continuation of the war is a tax on every person on the planet. To preserve the stability of the global financial system and the prosperity of future generations, the transition from the battlefield to the negotiating table is not just a moral choice—it is an economic necessity. The world must move from the destruction of value to the creation of it, before the fiscal and social scars of this conflict become permanent.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

The Fed’s Impossible Choice

 The Fed’s Impossible Choice

R Kannan

The March 17–18, 2026, FOMC minutes reveal a Federal Reserve grappling with a fragmented economic landscape, where traditional modelling is increasingly challenged by external shocks. Faced with a choice between cooling persistent inflation and protecting a vulnerable labour market, the Committee opted for a cautious pause, maintaining the federal funds rate at 3.5% to 3.75%.

Salient Points from the Minutes

  • Geopolitical Shock: The conflict in the Middle East has driven a 50% surge in front-month crude oil prices, injecting "elevated uncertainty" into near-term inflation projections.
  • The AI "Disruption": AI is no longer just a buzzword; it is a market mover. Concerns over AI-driven disruptions caused a 5% decline in broad equity prices, with the software sector and related leveraged loans bearing the brunt of the sell-off.
  • Policy Divergence: A growing split has emerged within the FOMC. While most favoured the pause, Stephen Miran dissented, calling for a 25-basis-point cut due to restrictive policy risks, while other members signalled that rate hikes might be necessary if inflation fails to moderate.
  • Sticky Inflation: Core PCE inflation rose to 3.1% in January, fuelled by higher tariffs on goods, even as housing services inflation showed signs of slowing.
  • Labor Market Fragility: Despite a stable 4.4% unemployment rate, job gains have been low. Many participants warned that the labour market is "vulnerable to adverse shocks" in a low-hiring environment.

In the wood-panelled quiet of the Eccles Building, the Federal Reserve is learning that the old maps no longer work. For decades, central banking was a game of tug-of-war between two clear ends of a rope: employment and inflation. But as the minutes of the March 17–18 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee make clear, the rope has frayed into a complex web of geopolitical firestorms, technological upheaval, and a labour market that is technically stable but feels increasingly hollow.

By holding interest rates at 3.5% to 3.75%, the Fed has signalled a "higher-for-longer" stance that is less about confidence and more about a lack of visibility. We are entering an era of "just-in-case" monetary policy, where the goal is no longer to steer the ship, but simply to keep it from hitting the rocks in a storm of "elevated uncertainty".

The immediate threat is the Middle East. With front-month crude oil prices leaping 50%, the spectre of a stagflationary shock—low growth paired with high prices—is no longer a theoretical risk. While the Fed’s staff projection suggests they might "look through" this energy spike, the reality is more jagged. Inflation expectations are creeping up, and the Committee is rightfully worried that years of above-target prices have left the public’s patience thin.

Then there is the ghost in the machine: Artificial Intelligence. The minutes reveal that AI is no longer merely a productivity promise for the future; it is a source of immediate financial instability. Markets have already begun punishing the software sector, and private credit funds—the "shadow banks" of our era—are seeing a surge in redemption requests as investors flee AI-vulnerable business models. In the labour market, firms are reportedly delaying hiring in anticipation of AI adoption, creating a "low-hiring environment" that leaves workers exposed to even the slightest economic downturn.

The banking outlook is equally clouded. While the Treasury market continues to "function well," the undercurrents are treacherous. Liquidity is thinning, and the sharp repricing of software-related leveraged loans suggests that the next credit crisis might not start with mortgages, but with code. The Fed’s reliance on standing repo operations to maintain "ample" reserves is a technical fix for a structural problem: the financial system is increasingly sensitive to volatility that central banks can neither predict nor control.

Perhaps most telling is the internal fracturing of the FOMC itself. The dissent by Stephen Miran for a rate cut, set against a backdrop where 30% of market participants now fear a rate hike, highlights a central bank at a crossroads. To cut now risks an inflationary spiral fuelled by oil and tariffs; to hold risks a labour market collapse that could happen with startling speed given the current low rate of job creation.

The American economy currently resembles a house that looks sturdy on the outside but has a foundation shifting in real-time. With growth upgraded to 2.4% for the year, the "solid pace" of expansion provides a temporary cushion. But as the Fed acknowledges, in this environment, a forecast is only as good as the next headline from the Middle East or the next breakthrough in Silicon Valley.

The Fed's "nimble" approach is the only rational response to an irrational world. But as we wait for the data to clear, we must recognize that the era of predictable, model-driven policy is over. The "long-run neutral rate" is no longer a fixed star; it is a moving target in a fog of war and innovation. For now, the Fed is sitting tight, but the minutes suggest they are holding their breath. We should, too.

 

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

The RBI’s Masterful Balancing Act: Stability Over Speed

The RBI’s Masterful Balancing Act: Stability Over Speed

R Kannan

April 8, 2026

In the grand theatre of global central banking, where the Federal Reserve often grabs the spotlight and other central banks struggle with a fractured script, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has quietly mastered the art of the "steady hand." Today’s first bi-monthly monetary policy for the 2026-27 fiscal year is not merely a statement of status quo; it is a sophisticated exercise in calibrated prudence. By maintaining the repo rate at 5.25% and adhering to a "neutral" stance, Governor Sanjay Malhotra and the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) have signalled that in an era of geopolitical tremors, stability is the ultimate luxury.

The decision arrives against a volatile backdrop. The spectre of the US-Israel-Iran conflict has pushed crude oil prices north of $100 per barrel, threatening to upend the inflation math for energy-dependent emerging markets. In such a climate, a hawkish turn might have choked growth, while a dovish cut would have been an invitation to currency speculators. Instead, the RBI has chosen a middle path that addresses three critical pillars: growth resilience, rupee fortification, and surgical liquidity management.

Anchoring the Growth Narrative

The headline projection of 6.9% GDP growth for FY27 is a testament to the RBI’s confidence in India’s domestic engines, even as it reflects a downward revision from the 7.4% estimated in February. This moderation is a direct response to supply-side shocks caused by the West Asia conflict. While growth has cooled slightly from the previous year, it remains the envy of the G20. The central bank is betting on a "virtuous cycle" of investment and consumption, noting that internal fundamentals—such as healthy corporate balance sheets—remain on a "stronger footing" than in previous crisis episodes.

By holding rates steady, the RBI is allowing the 125 basis points of cuts delivered since early 2025 to fully percolate through the system. For the corporate sector, this predictability is vital. The RBI’s message to India Inc. is clear: the cost of capital remains supportive, provided you have the discipline to execute.

The Rupee and the "Strait of Hormuz" Factor

The most pressing challenge for the MPC today was arguably the exchange rate. The report adjusted its exchange rate projection to ₹94 per USD for FY27, reflecting recent volatility where the rupee touched record lows due to foreign portfolio investment (FPI) outflows.

Crucially, the RBI highlighted that disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz are acting as a "drag" on domestic production, affecting the availability of critical inputs like crude oil and fertilizers. To account for this, the baseline assumption for Brent crude oil has been raised to $85 per barrel. By capping authorized dealers' net open rupee positions and tightening rules on non-deliverable forward (NDF) contracts, the central bank is "leaning against the wind" to prevent disorderly movements without signalling a structural change in policy.

New Frontiers in Transparency and Risk

In a significant transparency move, the RBI has,  provided a formal quarterly path for Core CPI inflation, projecting it at 4.4% for FY27. Meanwhile, headline CPI inflation for FY27 is now projected at 4.6%, up from 4.2%, driven by higher imported inflation due to rising energy costs.

The Governor also flagged "potential El Niño conditions" in the second half of FY27 as a major risk factor that could stoke food inflation and dampen rural demand. However, there is a silver lining: despite the conflict in West Asia, the RBI does not anticipate a significant dent in remittances, citing the diversification of the Indian diaspora’s skill pool.

Strengthening the Financial Backbone: Banks and NBFCs

For Commercial Banks and NBFCs, the policy provides a framework of cautious stability. The Governor noted that India’s forex reserves remain healthy at $696.1 billion, providing a necessary buffer against external shocks and currency volatility that often impacts bank balance sheets.

The report emphasizes that fiscal and monetary coordination—such as government supply management for essential commodities—is crucial to ensure that initial supply shocks do not morph into persistent demand-side shocks that could affect the asset quality of lenders. The transition to a "wait and watch" approach signals to financial institutions that the balance-of-risks is being closely monitored before any further easing occurs.

Liquidity: The Silent Operative

If the repo rate is the policy’s public face, liquidity management is its engine room. Currently, the banking system is awash with surplus liquidity. The Governor’s emphasis on "nuanced liquidity management" is a masterstroke. By utilizing Variable Rate Reverse Repo (VRRR) auctions and other absorption tools, the RBI is ensuring that while banks have enough "grease" to lend to productive sectors, there isn't so much excess that it fuels speculative bubbles.

The Road Ahead

Ultimately, today’s policy is a vote for "policy credibility." Headline inflation remains the primary target, and the RBI is positioned firmly ahead of the curve. By balancing the needs of the home loan borrower with the requirements of the sovereign, the RBI has delivered a policy that is as much about psychology as it is about economics. India is no longer just "reacting" to global shocks; it is navigating them with quiet confidence.

 

Summary Table of FY27 Projections

Metric

February 2026 Projection

April 2026 Projection

Real GDP Growth

7.4%

6.9%

CPI Inflation

4.2%

4.6%

Repo Rate

5.25%

5.25% (Unchanged)

Crude Oil (Brent)

$70/barrel

$85/barrel

 


Tuesday, April 7, 2026

The Rupee’s Tightrope Walk: Balancing Growth, Inflation, and Geopolitics

 

The Rupee’s Tightrope Walk: Balancing Growth, Inflation, and Geopolitics

The Indian Rupee (INR) has entered a phase of extraordinary turbulence in early 2026, recently breaching the psychologically significant mark of ₹95 per US dollar. This sharp depreciation is the result of a "perfect storm": a new, aggressive tariff regime from the United States and a supply-side shock triggered by the escalating West Asia war. While the weaker currency offers a temporary cushion for India’s export sector, the broader macroeconomic implications—specifically imported inflation and a widening current account deficit—demand a sophisticated and multi-pronged response from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

The Exporter’s Silver Lining and the Tariff Wall

For India’s export community, the Rupee’s fall has been described as a "blessing in disguise." Following the rollout of the new US tariff regime, which imposed higher duties on several key Indian categories including textiles, engineering goods, and generic pharmaceuticals, exporters faced a significant contraction in margins.

According to data from the Ministry of Commerce, the effective depreciation of the Rupee by nearly 10% in the current fiscal year has allowed exporters to remain price-competitive in the American market. By earning more Rupees for every Dollar of sales, firms have been able to offset the cost of the new tariffs, effectively neutralizing a portion of the protectionist blow. However, this competitive advantage is fragile, as it relies on the currency’s weakness rather than structural productivity gains.

The Oil Shock and Imported Inflation

The "disguised blessing" for exporters is a clear curse for the rest of the economy. As a nation that imports over 85% of its crude oil, India is uniquely vulnerable to the current West Asia conflict. Data from the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas indicates that crude prices have surged past $110 per barrel due to disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.

This spike, compounded by a depreciating Rupee, has created a double-whammy for India. Imported inflation is no longer a theoretical risk; it is a reality. Higher fuel costs are cascading through the supply chain, increasing transport expenses and threatening to push headline inflation toward the 5% upper threshold of the RBI’s target. There are government efforts to diversify crude sourcing, yet the immediate fiscal pressure remains immense.

RBI’s Defensive Manoeuvres: The NDD Crackdown

To restore order, the RBI has moved beyond simple dollar-selling interventions. In a landmark directive in early April 2026, the central bank ordered banks to cease funding Non-Deliverable Forwards (NDFs) and offshore Rupee contracts. These cash-settled instruments, often traded in hubs like Singapore and London, were being used for speculative "shorting" of the Rupee.

The impact was instantaneous. By restricting authorized dealers from providing liquidity to these offshore speculative bets and capping their Net Open Position (NOP) at $100 million, the RBI choked the supply of speculative capital. The Rupee responded with a sharp one-day appreciation, recovering from ₹95.22 to approximately ₹93.10. This "guidance" serves as a reminder that the RBI is willing to use administrative "strong-arming" to prevent the currency from becoming a playground for speculators.

A Return to the FCNR(B) Playbook?

As the volatility persists, there is growing momentum behind a proposal to revive the FCNR(B) (Foreign Currency Non-Resident - Bank) deposit scheme with special incentives, similar to the emergency measures taken in 2013. Under this plan, the RBI would offer a subsidized window for banks to swap fresh FCNR(B) dollar deposits, effectively incentivizing Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) to park their hard currency in India.

Recent RBI data shows that NRI deposit flows slowed  in the April-January period, a sharp drop from the previous year. A revived FCNR(B) scheme could act as a critical "dollar vacuum," drawing in billions of dollars in a short window to shore up foreign exchange reserves and provide a natural buffer against depreciation without depleting the RBI’s existing $700 billion-plus war chest.

Expanding the Toolkit: What Else Can the RBI Do?

While the NDD ban and FCNR(B) proposals are robust, a truly "volatile environment" requires a more diverse set of stabilizers:

  • LREMS Evolution: The RBI could consider further liberalizing the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) in reverse, providing higher interest rate ceilings on NRE/NRO accounts to attract more stable, long-term capital from the diaspora.
  • Encouraging Rupee Trade Settlement: The Ministry of Commerce has been pushing for trade settlement in INR with partner nations. The RBI could accelerate this by providing more "Vostro" account clearances, particularly for oil imports from non-hostile regions, reducing the structural demand for Dollars.
  • Sovereign Green Bonds and MASI: Increasing the limits for Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) in the Fully Accessible Route (FAR) for government securities, particularly Green Bonds, could provide a steady stream of capital that is less prone to "hot money" exits.
  • Direct Intervention via ETPs: The RBI could increase its presence on Electronic Trading Platforms (ETPs) to ensure transparent price discovery, preventing the "gaps" in trading that often lead to panic selling.

Conclusion

The Rupee at ₹95 is a symptom of global tectonic shifts, not a failure of domestic policy. However, the RBI cannot afford a "hands-off" approach when the stability of the entire macro-framework is at stake. By combining administrative curbs on speculation with creative capital-attraction schemes like the FCNR(B), the central bank can navigate this volatility. The goal is not to defend a specific number, but to ensure that the Rupee's path remains orderly, allowing the Indian economy to absorb the shocks of a warring world and a protectionist West.