Brent crude was up $1.17, or 1.1%, to $108.70 a barrel at 0952
GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate was up $1.15, or 1.1%, at
$104.43.
"With the European Union working on new sanctions that may
target Russia’s oil industry, crude prices could edge up in the
near term," said FXTM analyst Lukman Otunuga.
The West is planning new sanctions against Russia over civilian
killings in Ukraine, with U.S President Joe Biden's national
security adviser saying that new U.S. sanctions against Moscow
would be announced this week.
There were mounting expectations that Europe would take action
to reduce transactions with Russia's energy sector, further
squeezing supplies, said OANDA senior analyst Jeffrey Halley.
To calm oil prices, U.S.-allied countries agreed last week to a
coordinated oil release from strategic reserves for the second
time in a month. However, Japanese industry minister Koichi
Hagiuda on Tuesday said that the International Energy Agency (IEA)
was still examining details of the release.
Oil prices jumped by more than $2 after his comments.
Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, expects oil
prices to trade between $90 and $120 a barrel during the second
quarter.
"Key events that could trigger additional uncertainty remain the
prospect for an Iran nuclear deal, Venezuela being allowed to
increase production and, not least, an increase in U.S. shale
oil production," he said.
The United States still believes there is an opportunity to
overcome the remaining differences with Iran in talks over its
nuclear programme, State Department spokesman Ned Price said on
Monday.
Any signs that the United States and Iran are moving closer to a
nuclear deal, which would return up to 1.3 million barrels per
day of Iranian oil to global markets, would weigh on oil prices,
BCA research said.
The end of the refinery maintenance period in Europe also lent
some support to oil prices, analysts said, because it will allow
higher crude intake.
(Reporting by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin in LondonAdditional
reporting by Liz Hampton in Denver and Isabel Kua in
SingaporeEditing by Mark Potter and David Goodman)
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