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US grants temporary waiver for Russian oil sales to India

"Short-term" measure will not provide significant financial benefit to Russian government, says US treasury secretary

By AFP
March 06, 2026
Rosnefts Russian-flagged crude oil tanker Vladimir Monomakh transits the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkiye, July 6, 2023. — Reuters
Rosneft's Russian-flagged crude oil tanker Vladimir Monomakh transits the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkiye, July 6, 2023. — Reuters

The US government on Thursday temporarily relaxed economic sanctions on Russia, allowing Russian oil currently stranded at sea to be sold to India.

According to a Treasury statement, the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control issued a Russia-related license "Authori[s]ing the Delivery and Sale of Crude Oil and Petroleum Products of Russian Federation Origin Loaded on Vessels as of March 5, 2026 to India".

It said the transactions, including those from vessels blocked by various sanctions regimes, are authorised through the end of the day on April 3, 2026.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the waiver was issued "to enable oil to keep flowing into the global market."

"This deliberately short-term measure will not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government as it only authori[s]es transactions involving oil already stranded at sea," he posted on X.

The sale to India will "alleviate pressure caused by Iran’s attempt to take global energy hostage," he added, even though India has said it will stop purchasing Russian oil as part of a trade deal with the United States.

In a rare effort to pressure Russia over its invasion of Ukraine, US President Donald Trump imposed sanctions on Russian oil majors Lukoil and Rosneft last November.

Those moves — the most powerful by Trump against Russia over the Ukraine war — saw major buyers of Russian oil scramble to find alternative suppliers.

Russia has reportedly built up a flotilla of old oil tankers of opaque ownership to get around sanctions imposed by Washington, the European Union and the G7 group of nations, over Moscow’s 2022 all-out invasion of Ukraine.