G7 agrees to explore cap on Russian oil price - communique
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[June 28, 2022]
By Andreas Rinke and Angelo Amante
SCHLOSS ELMAU, Germany (Reuters) - The
Group of Seven economic powers have agreed to explore imposing a ban on
transporting Russian oil that has been sold above a certain price, they
said on Tuesday.
"We invite all like-minded countries to consider joining us in our
actions," the G7 leaders said in the communique.
The war in Ukraine and its dramatic economic fallout, in particular
soaring food and energy inflation, has dominated this year's summit of
the group of rich democracies at a castle resort in the Bavarian Alps.
The G7 is looking at price caps as a way to prevent Moscow profiting
from its invasion of Ukraine, which has sharply raised energy prices,
taking the sting out of Western efforts to reduce imports of Russian oil
and gas.
Russian oil export revenues climbed in May even as volumes fell, the
International Energy Agency said in its June monthly report.
A ceiling on how much other countries pay Russia for oil would squeeze
Russian President Vladimir Putin's "resources that he has to wage war
and secondly increase stability and the security of supply in global oil
markets," a senior U.S. administration official said on Tuesday.
G7 leaders have also agreed to push for a ban on imports of Russian gold
as part of efforts to tighten the sanctions squeeze on Moscow, an EU
official said on Tuesday.
The war, which has killed thousands and sent millions fleeing, entered
its fifth month with no signs of abating.
Firefighters and soldiers searched on Tuesday for survivors in the
rubble of a shopping mall in central Ukraine struck by a Russian
missile.
TACKLING FOOD INSECURITY
G7 nations want to crank up pressure on Russia without stoking already
soaring inflation that is causing strains at home and savaging
developing nations.
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U.S. President Joe Biden meets with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz,
French President Emmanuel Macron, Italian Prime Minister Mario
Draghi and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson alongside the G7
leaders summit at Bavaria's Schloss Elmau, near
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany June 28, 2022. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst
There is a "real risk" of multiple famines this year as the Ukraine
war has compounded the negative impact of climate crises and the
COVID-19 pandemic on food security, United Nations chief Antonio
Guterres said last week.
G7 leaders pledged $4.5 billion on Tuesday to fight global hunger,
according to the communique.
The United States will provide over half of that sum, which would go
to efforts to fight hunger in 47 countries and fund regional
organisations, a senior U.S. official said.
The G7 is attempting to rally emerging countries, many with close
ties to Russia, to oppose Putin's invasion of Ukraine, and invited
five major middle-and-low income democracies to the summit to win
them over.
Some are more concerned with the impact of soaring food prices at
home, blaming Western sanctions, not Russia's invasion of one of the
world's top grain producers and blockade of its ports, for the
shortages.
Asked if G7 leaders had found a way to let Ukraine export its grain,
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Tuesday: "We're working
on it, we're all working on it".
G7 leaders also committed on Tuesday to creating an international
"Climate Club" to forge cooperation on climate change and made
pledges on decarbonising industrial sectors.
(Reporting by Angelo Amante, Andreas Rinke, Andrea Shalal, Philip
Blenkinsop, Sarah Marsh, Thomas Escritt and John Irish; Editing by
Barbara Lewis, Alison Williams and Tomasz Janowski)
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