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Europe is making it much harder for Russia to ship oil anywhere

SBFNews

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Europe is making it much harder for Russia to ship oil anywhere
amp.cnn.com

London(CNN Business) The European Union's embargo on 90% of the oil it imports from Russia is the toughest punishment it's inflicted on the Kremlin since President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine.

But a smaller part of the latest sanctions package could prove just as significant. A ban on insuring ships carrying Russian oil would make it harder for Moscow to divert hundreds of thousands of barrels a day to other buyers in India and China, and that could drive global oil prices even higher.

"Targeting the insurance side of things is the best shot at halting Russian crude flows instead of just redirecting them," said Matt Smith, lead oil analyst at Kpler, a market intelligence firm.

The European Union has announced that EU companies will be blocked from "insuring and financing the transport" of Russian oil to third-party countries after a transitional period of six months.

"This will make it particularly difficult for Russia to continue exporting its crude oil and petroleum products to the rest of the world since EU operators are important providers of such services," the Commission, the EU's executive arm, said in a statement.

The United Kingdom is expected to join the EU effort. That would further tighten the vise, since Lloyd's of London has for centuries been at the center of the maritime insurance market.

So far, Russia has been able to cushion the blow from a drop-off in exports to Europe by attracting other customers with steep discounts. But if ships can't get the insurance they need for delivery runs, that will become much tougher in the near term.

"The restrictions on insurance for Russian ships is hugely important and a primary reason we assume not all Russian barrels can simply be redirected away from Europe to elsewhere, in particular China and India," said Shin Kim, head of supply and production analysis at S&P Global Commodity Insights. "The ban will add political and economic complications to moving Russian oil."

The China and India factor​

The EU ban on Russian crude shipped by sea is being phased in. But European customers have already pulled back, wanting to avoid difficult logistics and reputational damage.
Exports to Northwestern Europe fell from 1.08 million barrels per day in January to just under 325,000 barrels per day in May, according to Kpler data. Pressure from the West forced Russia to curtail its production, which the country's economy ministry said in April could drop by as much as 17% this year.

India shows no sign of slowing its purchase of Russian oil

But an uptick in exports to Asia helped make up for a large chunk of those losses. China and India — taking advantage of huge price discounts — imported about 938,700 barrels per day in May, per Kpler data. In January, imports from those two countries totaled just 170,800 barrels per day.

"Fast forward three months after the start of the war, and Russian crude exports are still continuing apace," Smith said. "They're just being rerouted and finding new homes."

The EU ban on insuring the transport of Russian crude is aimed squarely at this problem. If the United Kingdom cooperates, it would make it much harder for India to pick up the slack. The same goes for China, where demand for fuel is expected to increase as coronavirus restrictions in major cities are eased.

The insurance market also includes a network of reinsurers who help pool risk. Many of these firms are based in Europe.

"Initially, at least, I think this is going to have a huge impact on the market," said Leigh Hansson, a partner in the global regulatory enforcement group at the law firm Reed Smith.

Shutting Russia out of other markets would have the desired effect of tightening the screw on Moscow, but it could further boost global energy prices just as Europe and the United States try to tame soaring inflation.

"Yes, Russia will suffer a loss of revenues, but Europe and the United States will likely suffer from a substantial increase in world oil prices," Olivier Blanchard, former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, wrote last week in an article for the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Insurance as a weapon​

Refiners and other importers aren't the only ones who care that vessels transporting crude have acceptable insurance.

"Uninsured or underinsured vessels would not be allowed to enter any major port or pass through important shipping choke points such as the Bosporus or the Suez Canal," Sergei Vakulenko, an energy analyst based in Germany, wrote in a blog post for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Financial institutions also remain wary of running afoul of sanctions, which can lead to huge penalties from regulators.

"It's not just a transaction that involves a refiner and a Russian producer," said Richard Bronze, head of geopolitics at Energy Aspects, a research consultancy based in London. "There's all these other parties who have to be involved."

Russia has vowed to circumvent the new rules by leaning on state guarantees that in theory could be used in place of traditional insurance coverage. Reuters has reported that the state-controlled Russian National Reinsurance Company is now the primary reinsurer of Russian vessels.

"This problem is solvable," Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chair of Russia's Security Council, said on his official Telegram channel. "The question of insurance of deliveries can be closed through state guarantees in the framework of international agreements with third countries.

Russia has always been a responsible and reliable partner, and will stay that way going forward."

That means Russian shipments likely won't be cut off entirely.

"It's disruptive, but it's not going to wipe out all Russian exports," Bronze said.

But not everyone will view this as an adequate solution — especially given questions about whether Russia would be able to pay out claims should it need to while it's subject to harsh sanctions.

"There's going to be a lot more doubt," Bronze said. "I think it narrows the pool of countries that are willing to buy."

— Clare Sebastian contributed reporting.
 

LordElrond

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Meanwhile, Joe tripping over his own sanctions… gotta need more wheels
69C26F7B-4972-4856-BE8B-73F03336A10B.jpeg
 

Loofydralb

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That's great news.

Russia and China can start their own insurance to cover their ships and eventually take over from London.
Another win for Putin
 

mudhatter

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That's great news.

Russia and China can start their own insurance to cover their ships and eventually take over from London.
Another win for Putin

dun get why insurance is a big deal

you can ask norkie iran cuba venezuela to insure the ships, they also get to earn some freebie.

why not?

escort those ships with 20k tonne destroyers, to guard the mouths of all strategic chokepoints like malacca straits sunda straits gibraltar (originally, Jabal Al Tariq) Suez Canal Straits of Hormuz, Bab el Mandab/Red Sea, etc

Iranians should be able to earn at least 500 billion RMB each year from selling Bavar 373 on naval warships if they had a semi competent shipbuilding industry**

last I checked they can't even churn out a small fast attack boat that can sell in the open market

turkey slightly more competitive but only at low end low labour cost simpler product. like personal yachts or small fast attack crafts.

not able to churn out $billion or more ships marine offshore products rigs floaters fpso etc


** that's if you know the implications of controlling all those chokepoints would be. right now most countries don't possess nuclear deterrence, economically poor, technologically backward, scientifically ignorant, and reliant on imports for most high end good services or knowledge.

by helping other countries gain nuclear deterrence, iran can easily earn upwards of 500 billion RMB a year, if you know the implications of such a move. however, iran is just too small, backward and incompetent to do so alone. same holds true for the likes of turkey or even indon paki bangla nigeria egypt asean negro africa middle east latin america central asia balkans etc. ceca virus even worse but pumped up by their anglo masters as counterweight to tiongs due to population, otherwise, long long ago it'd have succumbed to centrifugal tendencies of its internal constituents that are as different from each other, as let's say, the constituents of relatively homogeneous europe are from each other.


pathetic.

maybe the realistic expectation is not to expect countries with low IQ to achieve great things, not to expect them to have great work ethic, organizational skills, talent, inventiveness, brains, foresight, intellect or civilization.
 
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mojito

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Russian oil will find its way to the market lah. How else is Europe going to pull through winter? :cool:
 
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