Puri hails India-Japan Joint Statement on Energy Resilience
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on 2 July 2026 welcomed a landmark Joint Statement on Energy Resilience issued between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, describing it as a significant step forward in India-Japan energy ties that will strengthen the voice of oil and gas-consuming nations globally.
Context
Puri called the joint statement 'momentous', noting that the two nations reaffirmed the importance of cooperation to address 'shared challenges of energy availability and affordability.' The statement covers supply assurance, resilience-building and mechanisms to mitigate market volatility. As he put it, the agreement aims at 'strengthening the voice of oil and gas-consuming countries' — a direct reference to the leverage that large importers can exercise when they coordinate.
Both India and Japan rank among the world's largest energy consumers and importers, making them structurally vulnerable to supply shocks and price swings driven by geopolitical disruptions. Their convergence on market stabilisation reflects a shared strategic interest in reducing that vulnerability.
Policy Backdrop
India-Japan annual summits were institutionalised in 2006 as the cornerstone of their special strategic and global partnership, and ministerial-level Energy Dialogues have been held regularly since 2010. India launched its Strategic Petroleum Reserves programme in 2004 to build emergency stockpiles, and the two countries have progressively deepened cooperation on market transparency and supply-chain resilience within that framework.
The new joint statement advances three concrete pillars: joint stockpiling, market information-sharing, and coordinated efforts for market stabilisation. Each pillar addresses a distinct vulnerability — physical reserve adequacy, data asymmetry, and price volatility — that large consuming nations face when global supply tightens.
Stakeholders and Impact
Puri specifically highlighted the maritime dimension, stating that 'cooperation on resilient maritime energy transport builds on my visit to Japan last year and will boost India's shipbuilding ambitions.' This connects the energy security agenda directly to India's domestic industrial policy, particularly the government's push to expand indigenous shipbuilding capacity.
The agreement has implications beyond the bilateral relationship. By coordinating stockpiling and market-stabilisation mechanisms, India and Japan position themselves as a counterweight to supply-side producers in shaping global energy market dynamics. Other large Asian importers — including South Korea and Southeast Asian nations — could benefit from or align with the framework over time.
What's Next
Implementation of the maritime energy transport cooperation and market-stabilisation mechanisms will be the key test of the joint statement's ambitions. Progress is expected to be reviewed at the next annual India-Japan summit and potentially within Quad-related energy discussions. The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, the Ministry of External Affairs and the Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways are all tagged in Puri's post, signalling a whole-of-government approach to execution.
For India's energy sector, the agreement marks a continuation of the country's strategy of building a coalition of like-minded consuming nations to reduce dependence on any single supply corridor and insulate domestic consumers from global price shocks.