What is Strategic Petroleum Reserve?

A Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) is a government-maintained emergency stockpile of crude oil designed to insulate a nation against sudden supply disruptions, geopolitical conflicts, natural disasters, or sharp price spikes. Because India imports the overwhelming majority of its crude — import dependence stood at roughly 88% in FY2024-25 — such a buffer is central to its energy security strategy.

The Government of India approved building strategic reserves and a Special Purpose Vehicle in 2004. Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Limited (ISPRL), incorporated in June 2004, was made a wholly owned subsidiary of the Oil Industry Development Board (OIDB) and builds the reserves in underground rock caverns — a low-cost, low-evaporation, secure storage method.

Phase I: locations and capacity

Phase I created total storage of 5.33 million metric tonnes (MMT) across three coastal sites, completed and filled:

LocationStateCapacity (MMT)
VisakhapatnamAndhra Pradesh1.33
MangaluruKarnataka1.50
PadurKarnataka2.50
Total5.33

This Phase-I capacity provides roughly 9.5 days of India's crude oil requirement based on consumption patterns (as per ISPRL/Ministry of Petroleum). Combined with commercial stocks held by oil marketing companies, India's total cover has been reported at around 74 days — still short of the IEA's 90-day net-import standard.

Phase II expansion

To deepen the buffer, the government has moved to add two more facilities totalling 6.5 MMTChandikhol, Odisha (4 MMT) and an additional Padur, Karnataka (2.5 MMT) — proposed under a public-private-partnership (PPP) model to reduce budgetary outlay. These remain under development. Once Phase II is operational, total SPR capacity would rise to about 11.83 MMT, materially extending strategic cover.

Significance

  • Cushions supply shocks: A reserve lets India keep refineries running during embargoes, wars, or shipping-lane disruptions (e.g., Strait of Hormuz risks).
  • Price arbitrage: India filled reserves cheaply during the 2020 oil-price crash, demonstrating the buffer's economic value.
  • Macroeconomic stability: Crude is India's largest import; price spikes widen the current-account deficit and pressure the rupee, so a reserve indirectly supports external-sector stability.

UPSC angle

For Prelims, remember: ISPRL (OIDB subsidiary), three Phase-I sites, underground rock caverns, and the IEA's 90-day recommendation (India is an IEA Associate Member since 2017, not full). For Mains GS3, frame SPR within energy security, import-dependence reduction, and strategic autonomy; for GS2, link to India–IEA cooperation and West Asia geopolitics. Cross-link with current-affairs on crude prices and the energy-transition debate.

Sources: ISPRL (isprlindia.com); Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (mopng.gov.in); PIB; IEA; U.S. EIA. Figures date-stamped to latest available (FY2024-25 / 2026).