Mercury (Hobart)

Russian oil threat worries importers

- MEHREEN KHAN

THE global oil market is braced for fresh volatility at the start of year after Russia sent out conflictin­g messages over how much oil it would produce in retaliatio­n against an internatio­nal price cap to limit Moscow’s energy revenues.

Alexander Novak, Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister (pictured), caused oil prices to jump last Friday after he warned that Moscow could cut production by up to 7 per cent, or 700,000 barrels per day, at the start of next year to target countries that had taken part in the price cap.

He appeared to step back from the warning on Saturday, saying Russia could still boost oil production if a European ban on refined oil products that comes into force next year hurts Moscow’s lucrative energy industry.

“If there are problems with the sale of petroleum products, oil refining to some extent can be replaced by additional volumes of oil exports,” Novak told Russian state TV Tass.

Moscow has increased its warnings over oil and gas production after G7 nations and the European Union agreed an internatio­nal price cap on Russia’s seaborne exports on December 5.

Preliminar­y data has shown a fall of more than 50 per cent in Russia’s oil export volumes a week after the cap was introduced, according to numbers from Bloomberg.

Tatiana Orlova, of Oxford Economics, said the drop in exports was unlikely to be the result of Moscow deliberate­ly cutting back on production as Vladimir Putin mulls his response to sanctions.

“The collapse in volumes appears related to logistics including shipping shortages,” Orlova said.

Brent crude prices rose 3.7 per cent on Friday to dollars 83.87 per barrel and West Texas Intermedia­te was up by 2.4 per cent after Moscow said that it would ban oil sales to any countries that were part of the price cap.

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