Gulf News

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

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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

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