Saturday, March 14, 2026

Trending

Related Posts

India’s exports to West Asia($65B) at risk

As of Saturday, March 14, 2026, the ongoing conflict in West Asia has put an estimated $60–$65 billion of annual Indian exports at significant risk. This represents roughly 15% of India’s total merchandise export basket, which reached a record $437.7 billion in the last fiscal year.

The “trade artery” is currently under extreme strain, with exporters warning that even short-term disruptions to the Strait of Hormuz could stall up to $4 billion in shipments every single month.


The $65 Billion Export Basket at Risk

India’s trade with West Asia (including the GCC countries, Iran, Iraq, and Israel) is highly diversified, but several key sectors are disproportionately exposed.

SectorExport Value (FY25/26)Risk ExposureKey Impact
Agri & Food$11.8 Billion22% of total agri exports80% of Basmati rice and 79% of banana exports go to this region.
Gems & Jewellery$18–$20 Billion30% of sector exportsDubai is the primary hub for gold imports and re-exports of polished diamonds.
Automobiles$10–$12 Billion25% of vehicle exportsMajor markets like Saudi Arabia and UAE are seeing logistics delays.
Electronics$3–$5 BillionHighHigh-value smartphones are facing a 70–100% spike in air cargo costs.

Why the Risk is Cascading

The disruption is moving beyond simple “shipping delays” into a deeper financial and logistical crisis for Indian firms:

  1. The “Strait of Hormuz” Choke: Though India does not buy oil from Iran, 40% of its total oil imports and a massive share of its container traffic pass through this narrow waterway between Iran and Oman, which is currently a high-conflict zone.
  2. Working Capital Crunch: Transit times have increased by 2 to 4 weeks as ships reroute. This stretches the “cash conversion cycle,” meaning Indian exporters are waiting longer for payments while simultaneously paying higher upfront freight bills.
  3. Surging Logistics Costs: With air corridors over the Middle East restricted, air cargo rates have jumped by 70–100%. Shipping insurance premiums (War Risk Surcharges) have also climbed, squeezing the already thin margins of textile and spice exporters.
  4. Stuck Inventory: As of today, industry reports suggest that over 4 lakh metric tonnes of Basmati rice and thousands of containers of engineering goods are currently “stuck” at ports like Kandla and Mundra or in mid-transit.

Sector Spotlight: The Agricultural Crisis

The Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) has warned that prolonged war will hit Indian farmers directly. The dependence on West Asia is “structurally deep”:

  • Meat & Dairy: Nearly 99% of India’s sheep and goat meat exports go to West Asia. A total blockade would effectively kill this export category overnight.
  • Spices: Over 70% of nutmeg, mace, and cardamom exports are Gulf-bound, directly impacting farmers in Kerala and Karnataka.
  • Fertilizer Back-flow: India relies on the Gulf for 30% of its finished fertilizers and 65% of its sulphur. Any disruption to these imports will drive up the cost of agricultural production for the next harvest.

Government & Industry Response

  • Force Majeure: Exporters are urging the Ministry of Commerce to officially declare a “Force Majeure” event. This would provide legal protection against financial penalties for delayed shipments to foreign buyers.
  • Diplomatic Safe Passage: While Iran has allowed two Indian LPG carriers to cross the Strait of Hormuz today (March 14), a broader agreement for the thousands of general cargo containers is still being negotiated.
  • Market Diversification: Exporters are being advised to pivot toward “safe” markets in Latin America and North Africa, though analysts admit these cannot replace the $65 billion Gulf market in the short term.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Popular Articles