BusinessMirror

Russia aims to control oil pricing by creating own natl benchmark

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Russia’s government has made a plan to create a national oil benchmark next year, as it seeks to protect itself from efforts by the West to restrict the flow of petrodolla­rs to the country.

Key ministries, domestic oil producers and the central bank plan to launch oil trading on a national platform in October, according to a document seen by Bloomberg News. Russia will work to attract foreign partners to buy oil, with the aim of achieving sufficient trading volumes to establish a pricing benchmark between March and July of 2023, according to the plan.

Russia has been trying to create its own oil benchmark for more than a decade, with little success. Some of the country’s producers have sold batches of crude for export at the Moscow-based Spimex commodity exchange, but the volumes traded haven’t been high enough to establish a globally accepted benchmark.

The nation’s ambitions have intensifie­d after its invasion of Ukraine prompted a swathe of Western oil sanctions. Last month,

Group of Seven nations agreed to urgently explore how to curb Moscow’s revenue by imposing a cap on the price of its oil.

Russia’s primary export grade of crude oil, called Urals, is typically bought and sold at a price expressed as a discount to North Sea benchmark Brent crude. Since the invasion, that discount has widened significan­tly as sanctions reduced the appeal of Urals. Russian crude averaged some $84 a barrel from June 15 to July 14, according to the Finance Ministry. That compares with an average Brent price of around $110 a barrel over the period.

Neverthele­ss, the broader rally in global prices has meant the flow of petrodolla­rs into the Kremlin’s coffers has continued unabated.

Two Russian officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed that work is ongoing on a national benchmark, saying the country seeks to ensure it can sell its oil without any external pressure or restrictio­ns. The G-7 proposal only further proved the necessity of an independen­t Russian benchmark, said one official.

An executive at an Russian oil producer, who also spoke on a condition of anonymity as talks aren’t public yet, confirmed there have been discussion­s about a benchmark.

The proposal is still at its early stage and the government­al bodies have yet to determine whether the nation needs any additional legal frameworks for oil trading at the platform, according to the document. The Russian Energy Ministry didn’t respond to a Bloomberg request for a comment.

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