By Dipak Kurmi
The recurring instability in West Asia has once again cast a long and revealing shadow over the central vulnerability of India’s energy economy, illustrating that despite significant progress, the nation remains tethered to a narrow and fragile supply corridor. The Strait of Hormuz, a geographical focal point of global maritime trade, persists as India’s most significant strategic choke point, where any disruption ripples far beyond simple shipping delays. When this vital artery is constricted by geopolitical friction, India does not merely confront a localized supply problem; it faces a multi-dimensional crisis that encompasses fiscal stability, inflationary pressure, and a profound policy dilemma all at once. The current geopolitical landscape suggests that the Strait of Hormuz is not just one shipping lane among many but is perhaps the world’s most critical energy artery, and India’s deep exposure to it means that a regional crisis quickly metastasizes into a domestic crisis affecting refinery margins, import bills, freight rates, and insurance premia. While the immediate geopolitical risks are often the subject of intense public scrutiny, the underlying economic costs frequently remain hidden beneath a veneer of managed price stability that may not be sustainable in the long term.
In the immediate wake of the most recent escalations, the Indian government’s response has been technically competent and strategically sound, prioritizing the preservation of supply and the prevention of domestic panic. By raising domestic LPG production, resetting allocation priorities, and widening the scope of alternative crude sourcing, the state has managed to maintain an outward appearance of calm. Public sector oil marketing companies have once again been utilized as institutional shock absorbers, a role they have historically filled with varying degrees of financial strain. Recent government briefings emphasize that supply remains stable and refineries are operating at normal capacities, largely because the country has successfully diversified its portfolio to include more than forty different suppliers. This diversification has significantly reduced the proportion of imports that are strictly dependent on the Hormuz route compared to previous decades, representing the culmination of years of investment in pipelines, terminals, and strategic stock planning. However, it is essential to distinguish between technical preparedness and economic affordability, as the ability to absorb a shock does not necessarily justify absorbing it indefinitely at the same consumer price point.
The prevailing fuel pricing strategy in India currently functions as a form of deferred payment, where the immediate cost of the crisis is pushed onto the public balance sheet rather than being passed on to the end consumer. While this has avoided a visible consumer crisis and suppressed inflationary expectations in the short term, it has begun to crowd out other vital budgetary priorities. Fuel prices serve as a critical signal mechanism in a market economy, and when the state suppresses these signals for an extended duration, it inadvertently distorts consumption patterns and weakens the collective incentive for energy conservation. Such a policy might be defensible during a brief and acute emergency, but it becomes increasingly problematic if global crude prices remain elevated for a prolonged period. The political illusion that a stable petrol pump equates to economic stability masks the reality that the cost is simply being moved elsewhere—manifesting as foregone tax revenue, substantial under-recoveries for oil companies, and a diminished capacity for strategic investment in the energy sector.
This fiscal drag is particularly concerning at a juncture when India requires massive capital outlays to fund its ambitious energy transition and strengthen its physical infrastructure. The resources currently being utilized to subsidize retail fuel are resources that are not being directed toward the expansion of strategic petroleum reserves, the enhancement of domestic refining flexibility, or the scaling of clean-energy assets. Building a resilient energy system requires significant capital, and keeping fuel artificially cheap effectively siphons off the very funds needed to reduce future vulnerability. There is, therefore, a compelling macroeconomic and strategic case for a gradual upward correction in fuel prices once the immediate peak of a crisis begins to stabilize. A phased and calibrated increase would be far more sustainable than indefinite price suppression, as it would make the economic burden explicit and reduce the long-term strain on the exchequer. Such a transition would also be easier to communicate to a public that is increasingly aware of the link between global events and domestic economic health.
The real lesson to be drawn from the ongoing West Asia crisis is that resilience has a definitive price, and that bill cannot be footed by the state in perpetuity without corrosive effects on the wider economy. While India has made meaningful strides in infrastructure and diversification, the next phase of its energy policy cannot be predicated on the assumption that the government will always stand as a permanent barrier between the volatile global oil market and the domestic consumer. This model functions only up to a point of diminishing returns, beyond which it threatens the state’s capacity to invest in the very buffers that make future shocks less painful. Consequently, the government should begin the process of preparing the political and social ground for a more responsive pricing framework, one that is perhaps linked to a broader narrative of national energy security. The message to the citizenry must be clear: while India is significantly stronger and more prepared than it was a decade ago, it is not yet so insulated that it can pretend global shocks are entirely without cost.
A rule-based fuel stabilization mechanism offers a practical path forward by replacing discretionary interventions with a transparent and predictable framework. By defining a normal price band for crude—perhaps between USD 65 and USD 90 per barrel—the government could allow retail prices to adjust freely within that range, while implementing an automatic sharing mechanism for prices that breach the upper or lower limits. When prices are excessively high, a portion of the burden could be offset by calibrated reductions in central excise duties; when they fall, a portion of the gains could be diverted into a dedicated stabilization fund to finance future interventions. Such a system would protect consumers from extreme volatility while ensuring that price signals are not entirely lost. This approach aligns with the broader reform orientation seen in other sectors of the Indian economy, where transparency and institutional capacity-building have replaced ad hoc decision-making. Consumers and businesses alike would benefit from a system that is even-handed and less reliant on the unpredictability of administrative maneuvers.
The implementation of such a framework is technically feasible given India’s advanced digital public infrastructure. The ecosystem of Aadhaar, direct benefit transfers, and sophisticated data analytics allows for targeted support to those who need it most—such as farmers and transport operators—without the need for broad-based price distortions that affect the entire economy. India has already successfully navigated far more complex structural reforms, such as the implementation of the Goods and Services Tax and the scaling of the Aadhaar system, both of which required immense coordination across various levels of government. Compared to those milestones, establishing a rule-based fuel pricing mechanism is a modest technical challenge. What is required is the political will to integrate existing policy instruments into a cohesive strategy that prioritizes long-term resilience over short-term optical stability.
While the Indian energy system has held firm during the current West Asia crisis, the measures taken to protect consumers have also exposed the inherent limitations of the current pricing framework. Moving away from permanently suppressed prices is not about imposing pain on the consumer, but about building a more honest and fiscally responsible foundation for energy security. A gradual increase in fuel prices, framed within a transparent and rule-based system, would allow the economy to make the incremental adjustments necessary to build genuine resilience. In an era of persistent geopolitical uncertainty, the most effective way to navigate external shocks is not to hide their costs, but to manage them with clarity, consistency, and a focus on the long-term strategic interests of the nation. Strengthening the state’s fiscal capacity to invest in energy transition and infrastructure is ultimately the best defense against the vulnerabilities posed by strategic choke points like the Strait of Hormuz.
(The writer can be reached at dipakkurmiglpltd@gmail.com)
























