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Russian Oil Crux: New Bill Drops Proposed US Tariffs on India to 100% with a Special Trump Exemption Clause, What it Means?

A revised version of the US Senate's Russia sanctions bill has significantly softened its tariff threat against India, capping potential penalties at 100% instead of the originally proposed 500%. The bill also grants President Trump a waiver clause allowing him to bypass the sanctions if he deems it in America's national interest.

Russian Oil Crux: A newly revised US Senate bill has significantly scaled back its proposed tariff penalties on major buyers of Russian energy, dropping the maximum penalty from an initial 500% down to 100%. While the legislation continues to target top buyers of Russian oil and gas—including India and China—it introduces a pivotal wildcard.

From 500% To 100%

The legislation, championed by the late Senator Lindsey Graham and Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal, originally proposed a blanket 500% tariff on countries buying Russian energy. The revised text now caps tariffs at a maximum of 100% on the five largest purchasers of Russian oil and gas. Senate aides confirmed China, India, Slovakia, Hungary and Azerbaijan remain the top oil buyers named in the bill, while China, France, Japan, Hungary and Belgium top the natural gas list.

Who Gets An Exemption

Countries importing less than 15% of Russia’s natural gas exports, and demonstrably reducing those purchases, would be exempt from the tariffs. This carve-out could shield nations like Japan, France, Hungary and Belgium. India does not currently qualify for this particular exemption based on its oil-purchase volumes.

The Trump Waiver Clause

Perhaps the most consequential addition is a provision letting Trump waive the sanctions entirely if he determines doing so serves US national interest. Critics have flagged this as a wildcard, potentially letting the administration use the tariff threat as leverage in broader trade negotiations rather than a fixed penalty.

For India, the revised bill lowers the ceiling on potential economic damage but does not remove the underlying pressure over its continued Russian crude purchases.

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