US Senate to vote next week on 500% tariff bill for Russian energy buyers

The US Senate is set to vote next week on the 'Sanctioning Russia Act 2025', which could impose up to 500% tariffs on countries buying energy from Russia, including India. The bill aims to increase economic pressure on Russia amid the Ukraine war. India, reliant on discounted Russian crude oil, faces potential trade disruptions.

Washington, January 8, 2026. Republican Senator Lindsey Graham and Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal have drafted the bipartisan 'Sanctioning Russia Act 2025' after a meeting with President Donald Trump, securing White House approval. The bill seeks to weaken Russia's war economy in response to its invasion of Ukraine.

Under the provisions, if Russia fails to cooperate in peace talks or violates agreements, the US can impose up to 500% tariffs on imports from countries purchasing Russian oil, gas, uranium, or other energy products. Senator Graham believes this will deliver a major blow to Russia. President Trump had previously indicated that tariffs could rise if countries like India continue buying Russian oil.

For India, which has relied on discounted Russian crude since the Ukraine war, the bill poses risks to US-India trade ties, potentially destabilizing global energy markets. Analysts note it could pressure Russia economically but strain relations with allies.

Recent trade data shows India's exports remaining resilient amid existing US tariffs. From September to November 2025, telecom exports, especially smartphones, surged 237% to the US, offsetting declines in gems and jewellery by 78.5%. Overall marine product exports grew 17%, with gains to Europe and China. K. Anand Kumar, president of the Seafood Exporters Association of India (SEAI) Andhra Pradesh, said, “Shipments to the EU and China have increased over the past few months. We request the Centre to intervene and have Free Trade Agreements with other countries to help the aqua sector.” Siddhartha Rajagopal, Executive Director of the Cotton Textiles Export Promotion Council, added, “The Rupee at 90 is a good instrument for Indian exporters to locate new markets. It helps push exports to various markets.”

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Swedish official angrily criticizes US President Trump's 15% tariffs at press conference, with headline graph and Trump inset.
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Sweden slams Trump's 15% tariff hike after Supreme Court ruling

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Swedish economists and officials have criticized US President Donald Trump's escalation of global tariffs to 15% following the Supreme Court's invalidation of his prior levies, citing policy unseriousness and economic uncertainty for exporters. The government plans to assist companies via a hotline and push new trade deals.

Following the US Supreme Court's ruling against President Trump's IEEPA tariffs, his subsequent 15% global tariffs under alternative authority provide India new leverage in US trade talks, potentially aligning with its India-EU FTA ambitions.

Reported by AI

Russia's Foreign Ministry stated on February 18, 2026, that it has no reason to believe India has altered its position on purchasing Russian oil. This comes amid U.S. claims that India agreed to halt such imports as part of a trade deal. The ministry emphasized the mutual benefits of these purchases for energy market stability.

The US Supreme Court has ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) does not authorize the President to impose tariffs. This decision eliminates the reciprocal tariffs imposed so far, but it is not a reversal of US trade policy. For India, the importance of recent trade deals has increased.

Reported by AI

Japan and other Asian trading partners are evaluating the fallout from U.S. President Donald Trump's new 15% global tariff, imposed under a different law hours after the Supreme Court invalidated his prior levies, as part of broader international reactions including Europe's coordinated response.

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