Russia plans for seven more years of $40 oil
Moscow’s warning is the latest escalation in a game of brinkmanship between the Kremlin and Saudi Arabia
Russia is battening down the hatches for a Biblical collapse in oil revenues, warning that crude prices could stay as low as $40 (Dh147) a barrel for another seven years.
Maxim Oreshkin, the deputy finance minister, said the country is drawing up plans based on a price band fluctuating between $40 and $60 a barrel as far out as 2022, a scenario that would have devastating implications for Opec, the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
It would also spell disaster for North Sea producers, Brazil’s offshore projects and indebted Western producers. “We will live in a different reality,” Oreshkin told a forum in Moscow.
The cold blast from Russia came as US crude slipped to $36.14, pummelled by the continuing fallout from the acrimonious Opec meeting last week. Record short positions by hedge funds have amplified the effect. Bank of America said there was now the risk of a “full-blown price war” within Opec itself as Saudi Arabia and Iran fight out a bitter strategic rivalry through the oil market. Brent crude fell below $39, the lowest level in seven years. The International Energy Agency said in its monthly market report that Opec has stopped operating as a cartel and is “pumping at will”, aiming to drive out rivals at whatever cost to its own members.
Opec revenues will fall to $400 billion this year if current prices persist, down from $1.2 trillion in 2012. The IEA said global oil stocks are already at levels of 3 billion barrels, and are likely to increase by another 300 million over the next six months as “freewheeling Opec policy” floods the market. The