India has asked to become a full member of the IEA, the Paris-based energy watchdog's executive director Fatih Birol said today.
"The Indian government has recently made clear, with a letter to the IEA a couple of months ago, that India wants to be a full member of the IEA. And we are now embarking on that discussion," Birol said at the IEA's 2024 Ministerial Meeting in Paris.
The accession of the globe's third largest oil importer and consumer would be a major boost to the IEA, which was set up in 1974 to strengthen the oil and gas security of mostly western energy consumer countries. It has more recently shifted part of its attention to tackling climate change. The IEA and EU led the charge on a key pledge made at the UN Cop 28 climate summit in December. More than 120 countries pledged to treble renewable power capacity to 11TW and double energy efficiency, both by 2030.
India has been an IEA associate member since 2017 and signed a strategic partnership agreement with the group in 2021. But the IEA's membership criteria stipulates that a candidate country must also be an OECD member, which India is not. Another key IEA candidacy requirement is to be able to demonstrate crude and/or product reserves equal to 90 days of the previous year's net imports. In its latest India Oil Market Outlook, the IEA said said the country's crude stocks stood at 243mn bl, around 66 days of net import cover.
"India needs to enhance its capacity to respond to possible oil supply disruptions by implementing and strengthening its strategic petroleum reserve (SPR) programmes and improving oil industry readiness," the agency said in that report.
India is the world's most populous country and is set to be a major centre of economic growth in the coming decades. The IEA forecasts India will be the single largest source of global oil demand growth from 2023 to 2030, just ahead of China.
French President Emmanuel Macron in January expressed France's support for India's IEA candidacy, saying that its "membership would be mutually beneficial and contribute to the stability and development of the international energy market and the energy transition."
India's government in early February released an interim budget — ahead of general elections, set for March-April — which focused on support for solar, wind and bioenergy. India has set a net zero target of 2070.