Arab Times

EU brings industry together to tackle US dollar dominance in energy trade

Move reflects broader tensions with Washington over trade and sanctions

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BRUSSELS/LONDON, Feb 17, (RTRS): The European Union has convened a wide-ranging industrial group to work on promoting the euro and fighting the monopoly of the US dollar in oil and commoditie­s trading, reflecting broader tensions with Washington over trade and sanctions.

The group, which involves executives from European oil firms such as OMV and Eni and gas and power firms such as Fluxys and Engie, will meet behind closed doors in Brussels under the auspices of the European Commission on Thursday.

The workshop is part of an EU push to challenge the dominance of the dollar, with an EU official saying such a shift must be market-led.

Participan­ts are invited to dig into “constraint­s on (market-initiated) alternativ­es to the use of US dollar through wider use of the euro, in spite of the benefits of such a change”, the Commission said in materials prepared for the meeting.

The meeting, part of a consultati­on process until mid-2019, is expected to provide new input to EU plans for promoting the euro in energy trading.

“The EU is the world’s largest energy importer with an annual energy import bill averaging 300 billion euros in the last five years. Roughly 85 percent of this amount is paid in US dollars,” according to the materials for the meeting.

Other major commoditie­s producers and importers such as Russia and China have also long sought to increase the role of other currencies in commoditie­s trading.

“Washington doesn’t like cartels like OPEC,” said one participan­t involved in preparing for the meeting, referring to the Middle East-dominated Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

“But then how can you have one market dominated by one currency the dollar.”

Some industry players are skeptical, however, and not participat­ing in the meeting as they say making space for the euro in internatio­nal payments is too long-term a process.

“More than promotion, you need reforms, stability and convincing investors,” a senior central banker said, airing widespread doubts at the European Central Bank about the Commission plan.

ECB officials have said the only way to boost the internatio­nal role of the euro is to strenghten the European monetary union with banking and financial reforms that EU states have blocked for years.

The move follows a US decision to withdraw from an agreement with Iran on Tehran’s nuclear programme, with many EU companies such as France’s Total saying they were forced to stop buying Iranian oil even for euros because of fears of secondary US sanctions.

The US dollar clearing mechanism allows the United States effectivel­y to control all electronic bank transactio­ns and go after anyone who it believes is in breach of its rules.

Earlier this year, several European buyers suspended purchases of Venezuelan crude due to fears of US secondary sanctions even though they were not formally forbidden from buying oil under the latest US curbs.

Tensions between the United States and the EU over the role of the dollar go back even longer.

In 2014, Washington fined BNP Paribas $9 billion for trading Iranian and Sudanese oil, with the French bank agreeing a settlement under the threat of losing access to dollar clearing.

In the 20 years since its adoption, the euro’s internatio­nal role peaked at the beginning of the last decade. Its use dropped during the 2007-08 financial crisis.

The euro has not recovered since, and the dollar remains the currency most used in the world. Sixty percent of sovereign debt issuance and global foreign exchange reserves are in dollars. The euro is the second global currency, but its share of each market is just 20 percent.

The Commission has previously admitted that dollar dominance was due to higher liquidity, lower transactio­n costs and its use as a benchmark in commoditie­s and derivative­s markets - prerogativ­es that can hardly be challenged in the short term.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, a currency exchange bureau owner counts US dollars in downtown Tehran, Iran. The European Union has convened a widerangin­g industrial group to work on promoting the euro and fighting themonopol­y of the US dollar in oil and commoditie­s trading. (AP)
In this file photo, a currency exchange bureau owner counts US dollars in downtown Tehran, Iran. The European Union has convened a widerangin­g industrial group to work on promoting the euro and fighting themonopol­y of the US dollar in oil and commoditie­s trading. (AP)

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