The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Russia faces oil shut-in or price cap amid sanctions

-

NEW YORK: Treasury secretary Janet Yellen says it’s “very likely” that European sanctions will force Russia to offer some of its crude oil exports at a price set by the United States and its allies if Moscow wishes to prevent a shutin of some supplies.

“They’re going to be looking for buyers and we think they’re going to have a hard time selling all of it,” Yellen said last Saturday in an interview with Bloomberg News. “Our estimate is that there will be some shut-ins on Dec 5 unless they are willing to accept a price at or below the cap for buyers worldwide.”

On Dec 5, the European Union (EU) will impose a ban on seaborne imports of Russian crude. On the same day, the EU and the United Kingdom will prohibit their companies from providing shipping, trade finance and insurance for tankers carrying Russian oil unless the shipments are priced below a cap.

The cap level, which has not yet been agreed upon, will be set by a coalition that includes the Group of Seven government­s and the EU.

Several large oil importers, including China and India, have said they will continue to purchase Russian oil, and with fewer buyers on the market, they’re expected to see bigger discounts.

Together with Moscow, they should be able to arrange the shipping and financial services necessary to deliver substantia­l amounts of Russian oil. Russia is currently exporting about 3.6 million barrels per day by sea.

But if that shipping and insurance capacity is exhausted, those same buyers will have to secure deals at the capped price in order to access European services and arrange for delivery of additional supplies.

Russian officials, including President Vladimir Putin, have said Moscow would refuse to sell oil to any countries participat­ing in the price cap.

They haven’t said whether they would refuse any sales at that price to buyers outside the cap coalition who have no other way of securing delivery.

The US has for months worried the Dec 5 EU sanctions, designed to further punish Russia for its war in Ukraine, would backfire by trapping substantia­l amounts of oil in Russia and causing global prices to spike.

The US Treasury proposed the price cap as a workaround, allowing Russian oil to stay on the market but at a price that would reduce Moscow’s revenues.

However, if Russia rejects any potential sale at the cap price, it could provoke the very outcome the US has sought to avoid.

Still, oil markets have so far not been upended by uncertaint­y over how Moscow will respond, possibly because oil traders believe Russia will be able to unload all its oil without European and UK services. — Bloomberg

 ?? ?? Looming ban: A tanker moored at the crude oil terminal Kozmino in Russia. With effect from next month, the EU and the UK will prohibit their companies from providing shipping,
trade finance and insurance for tankers carrying Moscow oil. — Reuters
Looming ban: A tanker moored at the crude oil terminal Kozmino in Russia. With effect from next month, the EU and the UK will prohibit their companies from providing shipping, trade finance and insurance for tankers carrying Moscow oil. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia