Western officials finalizing plans for Russia oil-price cap
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[October 27, 2022]
By Andrea Shalal and David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. and Western
officials are finalizing plans to impose a cap on Russian oil prices
amid a warning from the World Bank that any plan will need active
participation of emerging market economies to be effective.
Officials said no price range has been decided yet, however one person
familiar with the process said the cap will be determined in line with
the historical average of $63-64 a barrel - a level that could form a
natural upper limit.
Such a level is in line with recent comments by Treasury Secretary Janet
Yellen that a price cap in the $60 range would give Russia an incentive
to keep producing oil.
The administration of President Joe Biden has seen the price cap as a
way to cut oil revenues for Russia, a major source of its funding for
its war against Ukraine, while keeping Russian oil flowing and avoiding
price spikes.
The actual price will be set in coming weeks ahead of the planned Dec. 5
launch of a European embargo on Russian oil and associated restrictions
on transportation and insurance of seaborne oil.
A senior Biden administration official said reports of any price range
were wrong, but declined to elaborate.
U.S. officials pushed back against a report by Bloomberg News quoting
unnamed sources saying they were being forced to scale back plans for
the price cap, with fewer participating countries and a higher price
level.
The administration has told reporters for weeks that the price cap was
already bearing fruit by empowering countries to demand bigger discounts
from Moscow.
Bloomberg also reported South Korea had privately told G7 nations it
planned to comply and G7 officials were also trying to bring New Zealand
and Norway on board.
"The White House and the administration are staying the course on
implementing an effective, strong price cap on Russian oil in
coordination with the G7 and other partners," a spokeswoman for the
White House's National Security Council, Adrienne Watson, said in a
statement to Reuters.
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A view shows tankers in Nakhodka Bay
near the crude oil terminal Kozmino outside the port city of
Nakhodka, Russia June 13, 2022. REUTERS/Tatiana Meel
Yellen told reporters earlier this month the coalition pushing for
the price cap included the Group of Seven, the European Union and
Australia, and they were "not trying to sign up additional
countries."
"For us, success is going to be not how many countries raise their
hand to say 'We endorse what you're doing, we're part of the
coalition.' We're not looking for that. What we want to see is that
Russian oil continues to flow into the market, and that countries
are using the leverage provided by the existence of this cap to
bargain lower prices."
DOWNWARD PRESSURE
Western diplomats say the price cap is already giving India and
other buyers of Russian oil better leverage in negotiations with
Moscow, enabling them to secure good discounts.
Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati told the Jakarta
Post in an interview published on Wednesday that Yellen told her the
cap would be set at a level that was just enough to create profit,
but not "supernormal profit."
"If it was 60 (dollars per barrel), that would really fit with my
budget. That would be nice,” Sri Mulyani told the newspaper.
The World Bank on Wednesday said the G7 oil price cap could affect
the flow of oil from Russia, but was an "untested mechanism" and
needed the participation of large emerging markets and developing
countries to be effective.
It noted Russia has said it will not trade with countries
participating in the price cap.
U.S. officials say the price cap will be policed by attestations
taken from buyers in local jurisdictions.
(Additional reporting by Juby Babu in Bengaluru; Editing by David
Gregorio and Lincoln Feast.)
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