India signs gas deal with US amid tariff tensions
Relations between Washington and New Delhi plummeted in August after Trump raised tariffs on India to 50%
India announced on Monday that it has signed a "significant" agreement under which the United States will supply nearly 10% of the country's liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) imports, as New Delhi moves to further diversify its energy sources.
Relations between Washington and New Delhi plummeted in August after President Donald Trump raised tariffs on India to 50%, with US officials accusing the country of fuelling Russia´s war in Ukraine by buying its discounted oil.
Trump has claimed that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has agreed to cut its Russian oil imports as part of a prospective trade deal — something New Delhi has not confirmed.
India and the United States remain in talks, despite disagreements over a range of issues, including agricultural trade and the Russian oil purchases.
Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri said India had signed the one-year deal for 2.2 million tonnes per annum of LPG, sourced from the US Gulf Coast, providing "close to 10%" of India´s annual imports of the fuel.
Puri said it was "the first structured contract of US LPG for the Indian market".
"In our endeavour to provide secure, affordable supplies of LPG to the people of India, we have been diversifying our LPG sourcing," Puri said in a statement, adding that "one of the largest and the world´s fastest growing LPG market opens up to the United States".
In October, Indian state-backed refiner HPCL-Mittal Energy said it halted purchases of Russian crude after Washington imposed sanctions on Moscow's two largest oil companies.
Reliance Industries, the privately owned main Indian buyer of Russian crude, has also said it is assessing the implications of the US restrictions, as well as those imposed by the European Union.
India's economy, the fifth-largest in the world, grew at its fastest pace in five quarters in the three months ending June 30, helped by higher government spending and improved consumer sentiment.
But US tariffs continue to overshadow the economy, with experts projecting that they could shave anywhere between 60 to 80 basis points off GDP growth this fiscal year, if there is no relaxation soon.
-
Trump administration preparing to disclose aliens to Americans: 'They're real!'
-
Memorial Day 2026: Full list of stores, banks and services open or closed
-
Rubio warns US will seek 'another way' if Iran deal fails
-
Pearl Harbor sailor identified after 82 years through DNA analysis
-
Deal or no deal? What is happening with the Iran-US talks: an explainer
-
Could AI replace pilots? Aviation industry tests next generation flight technology
-
Oil prices fall as hopes rise for US-Iran peace deal
-
Cuba receives Chinese rice donation during worsening fuel and food crisis
-
Trump is pushing Muslim nations to normalise ties with Israel after Iran war
-
Huge fire breaks out in South Gate industrial area, Los Angeles County
-
US-Iran agreed on principal deal to open Strait of Hormuz in landmark negotiations
-
Nobel Peace laureate Maria Corina Machado to return Venezuela for 2026 presidential run