Exclusive-India can buy as much Russian oil as it wants, outside price
cap, Yellen says
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[November 12, 2022] By
David Lawder
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - The United States is
happy for India to continue buying as much Russian oil as it wants,
including at prices above a G7-imposed price cap mechanism, if it steers
clear of Western insurance, finance and maritime services bound by the
cap, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Friday.
The cap would still drive global oil prices lower while curbing Russia's
revenues, Yellen said in an interview with Reuters on the sidelines of a
conference on deepening U.S.-Indian economic ties. Russia will not be
able to sell as much oil as it does now once the European Union halts
imports without resorting to the capped price or significant discounts
from current prices, Yellen added.
"Russia is going to find it very difficult to continue shipping as much
oil as they have done when the EU stops buying Russian oil," Yellen
said. "They're going to be heavily in search of buyers. And many buyers
are reliant on Western services."
India is now Russia's largest oil customer other than China.
Final details of the price cap to be imposed by wealthy G7 democracies
and Australia are still coming together ahead of a Dec. 5 deadline.
The existence of the cap would give India, China and other major buyers
of Russian crude leverage to push down the price they pay to Moscow,
Yellen said. Russian oil "is going to be selling at bargain prices and
we're happy to have India get that bargain or Africa or China. It's
fine," Yellen added.
Yellen told Reuters that India and private Indian oil companies "can
also purchase oil at any price they want as long as they don't use these
Western services and they find other services. And either way is fine."
The cap is intended to cut Russia's oil revenues while keeping Russian
crude on the market by denying insurance, maritime services and finance
provided by the Western allies for tanker cargoes priced above a fixed
dollar-per barrel cap. A historical Russian Urals crude average of
$63-64 a barrel could form an upper limit.
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U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen
looks on after her interview with Reuters in New Delhi, India,
November 11, 2022. REUTERS/Altaf Hussain
The cap is a concept promoted by the United States since the EU
first laid out plans in May for an embargo on Russian oil to punish
Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine.
INDIA WARY
Yellen's remarks were made after India's foreign minister said last
week that his country would continue to buy Russian crude because it
benefits India.
India's finance and energy ministries were not available for comment
on Yellen's remarks, but other officials have said they were wary of
the untested price cap mechanism.
"I do not think we will follow the price cap mechanism, and we have
communicated that to the countries. We believe most countries are
comfortable with it and it is in no one's case that Russian oil
should go offline," one Indian government official told Reuters,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
The official added that stable supplies and prices are most
important.
Rosneft, Russia's largest oil exporter, is expanding its tanker
charter business to avoid its buyers having to find tankers,
insurance or other services as the price cap.
Yellen said that even with Russian tankers, Chinese tankers and a
"shadow" fleet of older, decommissioned tankers and re-flagged
vessels, "I just think they will find it very difficult to sell all
the oil that they have been selling without a reasonable price."
(Reporting by David Lawder; additional reporting by Aftab Ahmed in
New Delhi; Editing by Will Dunham and Heather Timmons)
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