Russia has accumulated a sizeable surplus of Indian rupees through bilateral trade and is now exploring ways to deploy this capital in India’s fastest-growing sectors. Both countries are in discussions on channeling these rupee funds into sectors where Russian investment can support India’s growth while deepening strategic economic ties.
Ports and maritime infrastructure are a key focus, with Russia eyeing opportunities as India rolls out more than 800 projects under the Sagarmala program to upgrade ports, logistics corridors and coastal infrastructure. Russian stakeholders see India’s port-led growth and cargo-handling expansion as an attractive long-term bet for deploying part of the rupee surplus.
Moscow is also interested in India’s biotech space, including healthcare technologies and agri‑biotech that can improve medical access and farm productivity. In addition, special economic zones (SEZs) are on the radar, given their tax incentives, export orientation and scope for innovation-driven manufacturing and services.
By investing its rupee surplus into Indian ports, biotech, and SEZs, Russia aims to avoid holding idle local currency balances while gaining exposure to India’s high‑growth, reform‑led sectors. For India, such investments could bring capital, technology partnerships and deeper cooperation in logistics, life sciences and export‑oriented industrial clusters.





