Monday, 11 February 2013

Energy Interests Make India a Player in South China Sea Disputes

On India’s Navy Day in December, Indian Chief of Naval Staff D.K. Joshi declared that the Indian navy was prepared to operate in the South China Sea if called upon to do so. The government subsequently downplayed Joshi’s remarks, but the fact remains that the South China Sea has emerged as a vital sea corridor for India, with more than half the country’s trade currently passing through it. The security of the South China Sea will grow even more important to New Delhi in the years to come as India looks to link itself to East Asian supply chains and Indian energy imports through the corridor grow.

Speaking at a conference in New Delhi last month, Indian Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid said that the country’s energy requirements were growing at a “terrifying pace.” He further observed that if India continued to grow at its current rate of 8-9 percent, its energy import dependence would also increase dramatically. Khurshid projected that India would be importing up to 57 percent of its coal, 94 percent of its oil and 57 percent of its gas within the next two decades, compared to 15 percent for coal, 80 percent for oil and 15-18 percent for gas currently. India now imports 70 percent of its oil and 80 percent of its liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the Middle East. But given recent instability in that region, there is a sense of urgency in India about pursuing more diverse sourcing options.

These will include supplies from the Russian Arctic and Far East and the Pacific coast of North America as well as fields in the South China Sea itself. All of these sources will depend on freedom of navigation on the high seas. To secure that freedom, India will require greater coordination with Japan as well as some kind of understanding with China.

For instance, Indian gas giant GAIL recently concluded a multiyear LNG sourcing contract with Russia’s Gazprom, with deliveries to India specified to begin no later than 2019. It is believed that the supplies will come from the Yamal LNG project in Russia, which would be operational by then. Such shipments would require traversing the South China Sea. The same is true of shipments from Russia’s only existing liquefaction export terminal at Sakhalin II, from which India already gets some gas, with more supplies under discussion.

Beyond Russia, Indian hydrocarbon companies are also looking to make investments in North American shale oil and gas. Talks are currently underway for a potential $5 billion investment by a consortium of Indian hydrocarbon companies in the northern Alberta oil sands deposit being developed by ConocoPhillips. Moreover, India is also one of the likely Asian destinations for LNG from Canadian liquefaction terminals in British Columbia. Naturally, any supplies from Pacific North America will also come to India via the South China Sea.

Meanwhile the South China Sea littoral is itself becoming an important source for Indian hydrocarbon imports. India’s ONGC Videsh Ltd. has refused to abandon its stake in offshore oil blocs administered by Vietnam despite Chinese pressure. The company is also in talks with other littoral states for similar offshore fields. Beyond oil and gas, India already imports a significant amount of coal from South China Sea littoral countries such as Indonesia and the Philippines.

Given these trends, it is clear why Indian defense officials have reiterated their commitment to maintaining the freedom of navigation on the seas in general and the South China Sea in particular. At the moment India is in consultation with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and Japan on forging a common approach toward countering China’s aggressive maritime moves in the region. India is also still considering Vietnam’s offer of naval berthing rights at Nha Thrang.

Coordination with Japan is also gaining steam with the re-election of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has pursued a heightened Indian naval role in Asian seas in the past and is keen to advance dialogue in this sphere. The Indian side seems to be reciprocating his overtures -- the complexity level of joint exercises between the Indian and Japanese navies seems to have risen recently, and in an unprecedented move, Japan has also offered to sell maritime patrol craft to India.

But Indo-Japanese coordination is only one side of the coin. While both Asian democratic powers understand the need to send a coherent signal to China, they also realize that confrontation would not be in anybody’s interest. Up to now, one source of leverage India has had over China is the fact that the Indian navy keeps watch over the sea lines of communication in the Indian Ocean, through which most of China’s energy and other imports transit.

Yet India may lose this leverage as Indian energy supplies increasingly traverse the South China Sea and other areas where the Chinese navy has credible operational capability, creating a situation where symmetric counters exist for both countries. This may be an important reason behind India’s positive response to recent Chinese overtures for dialogue on maintaining stability at sea. Indeed, the fact that the India-China maritime dialogue will now include issues such as shipping costs and transportation, on which both sides have similar views, shows that mutual deterrence may have already moved both sides to emphasize areas of convergence rather than discord. But an even broader India-Japan-China trilateral dialogue is probably required to create the kinds of confidence-building mechanisms needed to prevent further tensions and even conflict, which currently seems to be lurking around the corner.

Saurav Jha