De-Dollarization Speeds Up as BRICS Yuan Deals Hit Petrodollar

De-Dollarization Speeds Up as BRICS Yuan Deals Hit Petrodollar
Source: Bloomberg News

De-dollarization driven by BRICS yuan deals is reshaping global energy trade right now at a pace that is catching a lot of policymakers off guard. Indian refiners are settling Russian crude in Chinese yuan and UAE dirhams. Iran is charging yuan-denominated tolls at the Strait of Hormuz. And the BRICS alternative payment system is processing hundreds of billions in transactions that simply bypass the dollar entirely. The global currency shift away from the dollar is no longer theoretical — it is moving real barrels of oil, and the petrodollar system decline that analysts have been debating for years is starting to look very real.

Also Read: Brazil Cuts Dollar Holdings, Adds 42 Tons of Gold as BRICS Push Grows

BRICS Yuan Oil Deals Drive Petrodollar System Decline

BRICS power
Source: International Banker

India’s Yuan Pivot in Oil Trade

In March 2026, Indian refiners purchased around 60 million barrels of Russian crude, and a significant portion of that went through yuan oil trade — not dollar settlement. Indian Oil Corporation also made direct yuan payments for two or three cargoes, skipping any intermediary conversion altogether. At the time of writing, this marks the largest single-month volume of de-dollarization activity India has put through non-dollar channels, and it fits squarely into the broader BRICS yuan push gaining momentum across energy markets.

Iran’s Hormuz Toll and the Petrodollar Challenge

A senior Iranian official told CNN that Iran wants oil tankers crossing the Strait of Hormuz to trade their cargo in yuan. That move puts yuan oil trade at the center of one of the world’s most critical shipping lanes — the one through which roughly 20% of global oil normally flows. An Iranian parliament member also confirmed that tolls have reached around $2 million per voyage, and Iran’s legislature is working on formal legislation to lock that in. It is one of the more direct expressions of the de-dollarization BRICS yuan strategy playing out in real time.

Iran's oil infrastructure map
Iran’s oil infrastructure — oil fields, pipelines, terminals, and the Strait of Hormuz
Source: S&P Global Energy / CNN

The Infrastructure Behind the Global Currency Shift

The BRICS alternative payment system driving this global currency shift runs deeper than most headlines suggest. The mBridge cross-border CBDC platform — which kept operating after the Bank for International Settlements stepped away — has processed around RMB 387.2 billion (roughly $55 billion), with 95% of that in digital yuan. China’s CIPS network settled the equivalent of $245 trillion in yuan transactions in 2025. And the dollar’s share of global reserves has dropped from 71% to 56.3% since 2008, with central banks buying over 1,000 metric tons of gold per year for three straight years.

Russian President Vladimir Putin stated:

“The US has weaponized the dollar.”

David Lubin, senior research fellow at Chatham House, also pointed to the same driver behind the global currency shift. Lubin stated:

“This growing sense that the dollar is being weaponized is one reason why dollar dominance is coming under increasing question as more countries might want to escape the risk.”

Dollar Still Leads — But the Gap Is Narrowing

chinese yuan bills currency
Source: scmp.com

The de-dollarization BRICS yuan story does have real limits. The BIS 2025 Triennial Survey found the dollar on one side of 89.2% of all foreign exchange transactions — actually up from 88.4% in 2022. China also still runs capital controls that limit how freely the yuan moves across borders, and BRICS nations have ruled out a common currency. Russia confirmed in January 2026 that talks on a unified currency “have not taken place and are not taking place now.

Also Read: BRICS New Development Bank Touts Chinese Yuan For Global South Funding

ING analysts also weighed in on the timeline, writing that this would be “a decade-long progression to a multi-polar world, a world in which perhaps the dollar, the euro and the renminbi become the dominant currencies in the Americas, Europe and Asia respectively.” Right now, though, the petrodollar system decline is moving faster than that forecast suggests — and the yuan oil trade volumes coming out of India and Iran in early 2026 are a big reason why.