Nayara trying to get UCO Bank to bypass EU Sanctions against Russian Petro Transactions

MUMBAI, Aug 16: Mumbai-headquartered  crude petroleum refiner Nayara Energy Ltd, which is part-owned by  Russian energy company Rosneft PJSC, is in talks with union finance  ministry officials to process payments for Russian crude oil imports,  bypassing sanctions by the European Union (EU), according to market  sources.

Nayara executives are working on a plan to get  government-owned UCO Bank to process payments for imported Russian  crude, since the bank had facilitated similar oil trades with Iran in  2018, sources said.

Nayara Energy Ltd is partly owned by Russian  energy giant Rosneft PJSC and it has spoken to union finance ministry  officials to get UCO Bank on board.

Rosneft PJSC owns a little  over 49 per cent of Nayara, while a 49 per cent stake is held by a consortium led by  Kesani Enterprises Company and the rest of the shares are held by Indian

retail investors.

The company would like UCO Bank to finance and  wire payments for Russian crude oil imports and help it receive  payments for refined fuel products which are exported from India.

Nayara  has been finding banks reluctant to provide even basic services after  the company was sanctioned by the European Union in July and UCO Bank  which has very less exposure to global financial markets would be to  mitigate the risk of secondary sanctions.

Nayara also expects its  troubles to increase after President Donald Trump’s threat to impose a  25 per cent tariff and additional penalties over India’s imports of Russian  crude petroleum after Russia attacked Ukraine in 2022, which allowed  Indian refiners to benefit from discounted Russian crude.

Nayara  has loaded at least two clean-petroleum product (CPP) cargoes after it  was sanctioned by

the European Union last month and the company plans to  continue its Russian oil imports and refining operations in India.

Most  foreign banks have stopped dealing with Nayara, forcing the company to  deal through Indian banks, after western sanctions were imposed on  Russia and Rosneft, which owns about 49 per cent of Nayara.

While  refiners are cautious about sanctions, India and Russia had set up  alternatives to western insurance, finance and maritime services in  order to conduct their trade in the recent past.

Indian refiners  buy Russian crude on a delivered basis with insurance comprising cargo  insurance, Protection and Indemnity insurance, besides hull and  machinery insurance, arranged by Russian entities. India also accepts  Russian insurance.

Earlier, India had devised a mechanism to  settle trade with foreign nations in rupee terms through vostro accounts  of foreign banks in India. Russia’s Gazprombank had opened a special  vostro account with UCO Bank and Russian entities like VTB Bank and  SberBank had opened accounts with their own India-based branch offices  in the past.

The RBI had also introduced a mechanism for international  trade settlements in rupees.

(UNI)