Exclusive: Western buyers freeze Russian payments over
dirty oil outage
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[May 20, 2019]
By Olga Yagova, Dmitry Zhdannikov and Gleb Gorodyankin
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Total and ENI have
stopped payments to the Russian firms who sold them contaminated oil and
said they will only pay when compensation is agreed, trading sources
said, upping the stakes in what they say is the worst disruption to
Russian oil supply.
The French and Italian oil majors told their suppliers, including
Russia's Rosneft and Surgut, that they would be ready to make payments
when the extent of damages is clear and would pay for clean oil when
supplies resume, the sources said.
"Why would anyone want to pay for this oil? Strictly speaking it is not
oil and no one in Russia is able to explain clearly who will compensate
whom and when," one trading source familiar with the development said.
Payment for millions of barrels of contaminated oil, that have been
stuck for weeks in pipelines, was due on May 15.
In theory, Western buyers are entitled to refuse to pay for oil they had
bought without knowing it was contaminated because every contract for
oil sales is accompanied with a quality passport that will show oil is
not up to standard.
However, sales along the Druzhba pipeline are governed by Russian law
which state that the payment must be made and if the quality is not good
enough this must be accompanied by a claim for damages, which can then
take months or years to process.
"Our position is clear. Western companies must pay and then submit claim
damages that we can address later," said a trading source with a major
Russian producer.
Russian producers have already paid taxes such as export duties and
mineral extraction levies to the Russian state for the oil they sold in
April, putting them under pressure to recoup money they had expected to
receive from the buyers.
Total, Eni, Rosneft and Surgutneftegaz did not respond to requests for
comment.
Belarus has estimated the volumes of contaminated oil at around 9
million barrels, which in normal circumstances would be worth more than
$500 million at current prices.
"This is probably the biggest Russian oil supply disruption ever. Oil
along Druzhba continued to flow during the 1969 Prague Spring uprising,
and in 1991 when the Soviet Union was collapsing," a second trading
source said.
Russia's only previous significant disruption of exports via Druzhba was
at the end of the last decade when Moscow suspended shipments for three
days over a pricing dispute with Belarus.
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A model of a pipeline is
seen at the main entrance to the Gomel Transneft oil pumping
station, which moves crude through the Druzhba pipeline westwards to
Europe, near Mozyr some 300 km (185 miles) southeast of Minsk
January 8, 2010. REUTERS/Vasily Fedosenko/File Photo
ESCALATING CRISIS
The crisis has escalated since Belarus told oil refiners and pipeline operators
in Europe nearly four weeks ago that the crude heading down the 5,500 km (3,400
mile) Druzhba pipeline was heavily contaminated with organic chloride, which is
used to clean oil wells and accelerate the flow of crude.
Russian oil flows via Druzhba were halted, sending crude to a six-month high
above $75 a barrel and tarnishing Russia's reputation as an exporter at a time
of rising competition with the U.S. and Middle East.
Russia has since said the oil was contaminated deliberately by an unnamed local
producer while Belarus said it would take months to restore clean oil supplies
to Europe.
Organic chloride should be removed before oil enters the supply chain as it can
damage refining equipment. To get the pipeline working again the dirty oil needs
to be removed and stored so it can be diluted with clean oil.
Traders estimate this process for all the contaminated oil in Druzhba would cost
tens of millions of dollars, while the question of who should pay remains
unanswered.
Last week, the buyers suggested Russian producers give guarantees in the form of
bank deposits that they will contribute to the clean-up, according to several
trading sources. But no solution has been found so far.
Oil was meant to be supplied to Germany's refineries Leuna, belonging to Total,
and Schwedt, which is co-owned by Rosneft, ENI and Shell. It was also meant to
be shipped to PKN Orlen and Grupa Lotos refineries in Poland.
"To date no company has taken on the responsibility of paying the damages due to
the reduction in capacity, which also affects the refinery in Schwedt, which is
8 percent owned by Eni," Eni said last week.
(Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by Alexander Smith)
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